Saturday, February 25, 2012

Toronto, CA: Freshly Brewed: Don’t forget your quarters for Parkdale’s Pinball Café

Okay, the article is mostly about pinball, but this location is also where a weekly Scrabble game is held - for my Toronto CA readers.

From National Post: Freshly Brewed: Don’t forget your quarters for Parkdale’s Pinball Café
The Pinball Café
1662 Queen St. W.; 416-402-7932;
Toronto
thepinballcafe.com

It’s not the usual soundtrack I’d expect to hear upon entering a café: In place of tapping on keyboards and ruffling pages, a din of snapping, bleeping and a deep chime filters towards me. When I look around at the brightly coloured walls and catch sight of a fully functional free-play 1973 Wurlitzer jukebox, I half-expect the Fonz to round a corner and ask me if I can spare a few quarters.

At The Pinball Café, it’s all about … the pinball. The vibe at this new Parkdale outpost is simply rad. Although, that three-letter adjective wouldn’t score you many points up front, where the Scrabble in the City group is having their regular Monday 6 p.m. meet. They’re a welcoming group, and a friend and I are invited to take over an empty board before we’ve even managed to order drinks.

Among themed cafés, this place marks a bolder move. The Pinball Café turns the anti-social work café and the parent/child meet-and-greet café model on their heads. (Although with free Wi-Fi and plenty to keep kids occupied, those two groups would be at home here, too.)

Open from 11 a.m.-11 p.m. on most days (9 p.m. on Sunday; closed Tuesdays), this is a joint that encourages interaction. Throw in a menu of milkshakes, retro chocolate bars and baked confections, plus a bar decorated with ’70s kitsch ephemera, and you’ve got the recipe for a dream clubhouse. It’s likely the way Jason Hazzard imagined it while he was growing up obsessively playing pinball in Woodbridge. Working as a professional mover more recently, Hazzard was finding (and buying) vintage machines increasingly often, says his wife, Rachel.

“But I was not going to let him collect any more and put them in our living room,” she says, laughing. So the idea for the café was born. “We wanted to do something fun together. And we both love coffee.”

If I had lowered my expectations for the cappuccino ($3), which is made using Faema Coffee’s Extra Strong Segafredo blend, I need not have. “I’ve been making coffee since I was 16,” Rachel says, noting her first job was at a Timothy’s. Her latest was working front of house at North 44. I add a chocolate peppermint patty ($1.50) to my order, mostly just because I can. House-made sandwiches ($5.95) are also on offer, with three rotating options. My cappuccino is nuanced, with a decent mixing of dark, deep cocoa-inflected coffee flavours and sweet foam, even if there is more than I’d like. (Critics might tell me to order a macchiato. To that I’d say, no, just a cap with less foam, please.)

When I return to my table, my friend is still struggling over the Scrabble board, feeling the pressure to play better with so many word nerds in attendance. I reassure her as I point to the back where, by this point in the evening, nearly every member of the Scrabble in the City club is poring over vintage pinball machines such as the Comet, Black Knight and Supersonic. There’s considerable buzz because former Canadian pinball champion Sean O’Neill was into the café recently and set a high score.

Quarters flow (most games cost only a single coin) and we join the posse on the nicely padded foam floor. In minutes, the laughter is infectious, and Jason Hazzard shows me what I’m doing wrong while launching.

Someone wanders in at 10:45 p.m., and asks if it’s too late for a milkshake. “Not at all,” Rachel replies. It’s hard not to feel like a kid again.

Canada: Saskatoon Scrabbles for literacy

From CKOM.com: Saskatoon Scrabbles for literacy
Community oraganizations to hold fundraising tournament
Lettered tiles are set to fly for literacy fundraising and awareness in Saskatoon on Mar. 7 READ Saskatoon has partnered up with CUMFI and the Saskatchewan Intercultural Association to put on a "Speed Scrabble" tournament at the University of Saskatchewan library.

It's all been organized

Speed Scrabble is a free-form, fast-paced version of the classic boardgame, played without the board. The objective is to use tiles as quickly as possible to form words, with tournament participants scoring bonuses for literacy-related words like "grammar" and "adjective."

"Literacy is taken for granted, and a game like Scrabble is taken as something that's fun, and a leisure activity," said READ Saskatoon's executive director Sheryl Harrow.

"For many of the adults that we work with it is far from a leisure activity."

There will be 12 teams of four competing in the tournament, like the city council team "Civic Spellers," the aboriginal student centre team "Scraboriginals, a"nd the Saskatchewan MLA team "Masters of the Lightning Anagrams."

"Through twitter and through facebook we can already see the teams are starting to taunt and tease each other," said Harrow.

She explained how recent studies have shown one in three Saskatchewanians faces daily struggles when it comes to reading.

"Literacy is like good drinking water. It's very easy for those of us who have lived with good drinking water to take it for granted."

All proceeds will go toward literacy programming.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Last 2 days have been brutal....

On my online scrabble game... I haven't won a single game. Doesn't matter who I'm playing - 200 points less than me, 100 points higher. I can't get any decent tiles. Sometimes I gamble on opening up a triple hoping that I can get to it before my opponent - never happens. So frustrating!

Sunday, February 19, 2012

31 games below .500

As I blogged yesterday, my word biz goal of getting to .500 by the end of Feb took a hit, thanks to my 14 (I thought he was 13 but no, he's 14) year old nephew who just had to play some games on my account and challenge people ranked 500, 600, even 1000, while his spelling skills are of the cat, rat, bat variety. I did play a few games on my own, without keeping track of any of the words I spelled, because it was just too much of a hassle with my nephew popping in and out (The TV is in the basement - he has an alcove in the basement with his own tv and a computer where he spends all his time playing video games until he gets bored and comes out and bugs me.) Anyway, now I'm back home, but I've got to spend the afternoon watching Phil Mickelson hopefully win the Northern Trust Golf tournament, then I've got some work to do in my freelance writing business, so I'll have to get back to my scrabble regimen tomorrow.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

14 year olds suck

My sister and her husband are having a belated anniversary weekend, and I've got my 14 year old nephew staying with me. So I was playing Wordbiz scrabble while watching golf, he wanted to play, and insisted on challenging the highest-ranked players possible. He couldn't even beat someone ranked 0, but he's a kid and he's male, so of course there was no arguing with him. So I'm way under .500 again. Sigh.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Eve Le QiNu's Money - Kindle & Nook Books

The reasons why I haven't posted much in the last 3 days is because I've been putting the finishing touches on this book which is now available for Nook and Kindle. Adds about 500 words to your vocabulary - coins and paper notes used around the world, and various financial terms. Kindle http://www.amazon.com/Eve-QiNus-Money-Unofficial-ebook/dp/B007A4557C/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1329520860&sr=1-1 Nook http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/eve-le-qinus-money-eve-le-qinu/1108895916?ean=2940013948617&itm=1&usri=eve+le+qinu%27s+money

Monday, February 13, 2012

Scrabble Face

When I play in this tournament over Labor Day, what "scrabble face" (as opposed to Poker Face) will I adopt?

I'm going to register for the lowest common denominator - but who knows if I'll be facing newbies like myself or experienced players who just aren't good enough to advance to the next level... but still able to crush a newbie?

Do I want to go in there all suave and cool? "Gilt-edged, glamorous and sleek by design." Why yes I do. Of course to do that I'll have to lose 60 pounds...you can't be glamorous or sleek when you're overweight. Unless you're 6 feet or so. But 5 ft 4? No.

The reason I'm thinking about this - at this time anyway - is because for the last two days I've come up against nothing but Rudeniks at Word Biz. You say hi, they don't say hi back. I hate that. I totally understand not wanting to talk *during* the game, but would it be too much to ask to respond to a simple pleasantry at the beginning of the game? For the 6 people I played with in the last two days, apparently so. Which is fine if I beat them, but if they beat me, which all six of these folk did, it cuts a little deeper. Because - 4 out of the 6 times, I lost because my tiles stank. I'd have all vowels or all consonants - turn in three or four tiles and get the same thing again! Meantime my opponent is racking up the points while getting ALL of the power letters.

Oh, that's just irksome!

So when I'm playing in this tourney in September, and I'm face to face with a live person beating me badly (should that happen) because I can't get any tiles...

Well, I have six months to rehearse my Scrabble Face and come up with some approptiate dialog to cover every situation!

Sunday, February 12, 2012

The Dictionary: AALII and ZZZ

The AALII is a tropical tree, according to The Dictionary. And unlike the AAL that I could never find, when I did an image search on the AALII, I got a whole page of photos.

Do a search on Wikipedie, though, and you get "redirected" to:
Dodonaea viscosa is a species of flowering plant in the soapberry family, Sapindaceae, that has a cosmopolitan distribution in tropical, subtropical and warm temperate regions of Africa, the Americas, southern Asia and Australasia.
That's a flaw with Wikipedia, not necessarily with the AALII. If one of their editors is going to "redirect" a page, he or she should make sure that the page to which you've been redirected actually mentions your original search item! Okay, let's move on to ZZZ.
An onomatopoeia or onomatopœia (from the Greek ὄνομα for "name" and ποιέω for "I make", adjectival form: "onomatopoeic" or "onomatopoetic") is a word that imitates or suggests the source of the sound that it describes. Onomatopoeia (as an uncountable noun) refers to the property of such words. Common occurrences of onomatopoeias include animal noises, such as "oink" or "meow" or "roar". Onomatopoeias are not the same across all languages; they conform to some extent to the broader linguistic system they are part of; hence the sound of a clock may be tick tock in English, dī dā in Mandarin, or katchin katchin in Japanese.

A List of OVERs, part 1

These are words you need to know, that need no definition. You just might not think of 'em as words right off the bat! 15 easy words to add to your Scrabble vocabulary today: Overzeal Overwound Overworn Overwork Overwore Overword Overwise Overwind Overwily Overwide Overwet Overween Overwear Overweak Overwary

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Do you BRUX your teeth?

If you BRUX your teeth, that means that you "clench and grind" them, or "gnash them." It's a word coined in the 1990s. The original word was BRUXISM - coined in 1935 from the Greek word "bryx" for grinding. So yout rask for today: play a game of Scrabble and use BRUX, BRUXED, BRUXING or BRUXES. Or of course, BRUXISM.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

The Dictionary: AAH and AAL

There's not a lot of fun to be had with the 2nd letter in The Dictionary, AAH. When English-speaking humans see something sad, poignant, beautiful and so on, they make noises of appreciation. They OOH and AAH. They go OH and AH as well. And that's about it. So let's move on to AAL. According to The Dictionary, AAL is supposed to be an East Indian shrub. But if you do a Google image source on AAL, all you get are eels. Lots and lots of eels. Do a Google image search on "East Indian Shrub Aal" and all you get is a picture of a hosta. However, Wikipedia saves the day:
Morinda tinctoria, commonly known as Aal or Indian Mulberry (though these common names also refer to Morinda citrifolia), is a species of flowering plant in the family Rubiaceae, native to southern Asia. It is an evergreen shrub or small tree growing to 5-10 m tall. The leaves are 15-25 cm long, oblong to lanceolate. The flowers are tubular, white, scented, about 2 cm long. The fruit is a green syncarp, 2-2.5 cm diameter. The plant is extensively cultivated in India in order to make the morindone dye sold under the trade name "Suranji". Morindone is used for the dyeing of cotton, silk and wool in shades of red, chocolate or purple. The colouring matter is found principally in the root bark and is collected when the plants reach three to four years of age. If the trees are allowed to mature then hardly any colouring substance remains. The small roots yield the most dye and those above about 1 cm diameter are discarded. The active substance is extracted as the glucoside known as morindin that upon hydrolysis produces the dye. Morindone is a mordant dye giving a yellowish-red colour with an aluminium mordant, chocolate with a chromium mordant, and dull purple to black with an iron mordant. Morindin is also present in Morinda umbellata but not in Morinda longiflora, a native of West Africa. Although imported into Britain and applied to wool and cotton, the dye did not find commercial success.
But go and do an image search for "Indian mulberry" and there are several photos of it - on pages which do not mention the world AAL at all! Nevertheless it's a word in The Dictionary, and now you won't forget it!
Indian mulberry, akitda (that's "also known in the Dictionary as") AAL

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

26 Feb, Grand Island, NE: Scrabble Tourney

From The Independent, Grand Island Nebraska: Literacy Council to hold third Scrabble Tournament The Literacy Council of Grand Island is preparing for its third annual Scrabble Tournament and is looking for more participants.

The four-round event is set for from 1 to 5 p.m. Feb. 26 at Full Circle Venue, 1010 N. Diers Ave., in Grand Island.

"I am looking forward to people coming and playing and having a good time," Executive Director Jen Larson said. "I want to let people to know that it's going towards a good cause."

She said the money goes toward helping people read, write, speak and understand English and to help with one-to-one tutoring.

A Literacy Council flyer promises friendly competition, a silent auction, trophy for the winning team, bake sale, prizes, food and drinks.

"People who have come and played before love it," Larson said. "I like playing Scrabble, and I know some of our board members do, too."

The event will also feature Mr. and Mrs. Ron Bailey, a one-to-one tutor for the program, as judges and Steve White as master of ceremonies.

"This is one of our biggest fundraisers," Larson said. "We had 11 teams last year, and I hope to have more this year."

Registration is $25 per person or $75 per team. Registration information can be sent to the Literacy Council at 410 W. Second St. Suite 8 or emailed to literacy@kdsi.net or giliteracy@gmail.com. Deadline for registering is Feb. 17.

More information is available by calling 385-5515.

The Dictionary, Pg 1: AA

The "Dictionary" of course is The Official Scrabble Dictionary, 4th edition.
Glowing `a`a flow front advancing over pahoehoe on the coastal plain of Kilauea Volcano, Hawai`i.

AA - A rough cindery lava

From the US Geological Survey:

A`a (pronounced "ah-ah") is a Hawaiian term for lava flows that have a rough rubbly surface composed of broken lava blocks called clinkers. The incredibly spiny surface of a solidified `a`a flow makes walking very difficult and slow. The clinkery surface actually covers a massive dense core, which is the most active part of the flow. As pasty lava in the core travels downslope, the clinkers are carried along at the surface. At the leading edge of an `a`a flow, however, these cooled fragments tumble down the steep front and are buried by the advancing flow. This produces a layer of lava fragments both at the bottom and top of an `a`a flow.
CLINKERS is in The Dictionary. "to form residue while burning." So is PAHOEHOE (which is in the description of the photo on the copyright free USGC site and used above).

"sooth solidified lava."

So is LAVA of course: "molten rock that issues from a volcano."

and

PAHOEHOE - smooth, ropy, hummocky lava

LAVALIKE: "resembling lava"

Monday, February 6, 2012

7 months to go

It is a little under 7 months until the Labor Day weekend, 2012, in which I intend to enter a Scrabble tournament in Irving, Texas. I do not expect to win this tournament, but my goal is to place in the top 50% of all participants. So if 100 people are there, my record will be in the top 50 of all players. If a thousand people are there, I'll settle for being in 500th place. But I know I have my work cut out for me. I'm well read and have a large vocabulary - of normal English words. But probably more than half the words in the Scrabble dictionary are foreign words that not even the most intellectual intellectual would know, unless he or she studied the dictionary - which is of course what I've got to do. I intend to memorize at least 2,000 new words by September 1. I have the 2- and 3-letter words down pat now (thanks to me taking advantage of my own books, Eve Le QiNu's Unofficial Scrabble Study Guides to 2 and 3 letter words) but there are still a helluva lot more words to go. Dallas Fort Worth actually has quite a few Scrabble tournaments a year, so my Scrabble future depends on this tournament. I live a minimum of a 12 hour drive away. With the cost of gas and hotels, it wouldn't be worth it for me to attend any more tournaments (after this one in September) unless I knew I would do well enough in the tournaments to make it worth my while. Of course I have other reasons for going into Texas. The WASP Musuem in Sweetwater, Texas for a start. Other aviation museums. Some dinosaur tracks, etc. But Scrabble would be the main impetus for going. So these next 7 months are very important.

6 letter word: I H O W L

3 letter words HIS HOS HOW LOW OHS OIL OWL SOL SOW WHO 4 letter words HOLS HOWL HOWS LOWS OILS OWLS SHOW SILO SLOW SOIL SOLI WISH 5 letter words HOWLS 6 letter word OWLISH

Thursday, February 2, 2012

The Cynic's Dictionary - the Os

OATH, n. In law, a solemn appeal to the Deity, made binding upon the conscience by a penalty for perjury.

OBLIVION, n. The state or condition in which the wicked cease from struggling and the dreary are at rest. Fame's eternal dumping ground. Cold storage for high hopes. A place where ambitious authors meet their works without pride and their betters without envy. A dormitory without an alarm clock.

OBSERVATORY, n. A place where astronomers conjecture away the guesses of their predecessors.

OBSESSED, p.p. Vexed by an evil spirit, like the Gadarene swine and other critics. Obsession was once more common than it is now. Arasthus tells of a peasant who was occupied by a different devil for every day in the week, and on Sundays by two. They were frequently seen, always walking in his shadow, when he had one, but were finally driven away by the village notary, a holy man; but they took the peasant with them, for he vanished utterly. A devil thrown out of a woman by the Archbishop of Rheims ran through the trees, pursued by a hundred persons, until the open country was reached, where by a leap higher than a church spire he escaped into a bird. A chaplain in Cromwell's army exorcised a soldier's obsessing devil by throwing the soldier into the water, when the devil came to the surface. The soldier, unfortunately, did not.

OBSOLETE, adj. No longer used by the timid. Said chiefly of words. A word which some lexicographer has marked obsolete is ever thereafter an object of dread and loathing to the fool writer, but if it is a good word and has no exact modern equivalent equally good, it is good enough for the good writer. Indeed, a writer's attitude toward "obsolete" words is as true a measure of his literary ability as anything except the character of his work. A dictionary of obsolete and obsolescent words would not only be singularly rich in strong and sweet parts of speech; it would add large possessions to the vocabulary of every competent writer who might not happen to be a competent reader.

OBSTINATE, adj. Inaccessible to the truth as it is manifest in the splendor and stress of our advocacy.

The popular type and exponent of obstinacy is the mule, a most intelligent animal.

OCCASIONAL, adj. Afflicting us with greater or less frequency. That, however, is not the sense in which the word is used in the phrase "occasional verses," which are verses written for an "occasion," such as an anniversary, a celebration or other event. True, they afflict us a little worse than other sorts of verse, but their name has no reference to irregular recurrence.

OCCIDENT, n. The part of the world lying west (or east) of the Orient. It is largely inhabited by Christians, a powerful subtribe of the Hypocrites, whose principal industries are murder and cheating, which they are pleased to call "war" and "commerce." These, also, are the principal industries of the Orient.

OCEAN, n. A body of water occupying about two-thirds of a world made for man—who has no gills.

OFFENSIVE, adj. Generating disagreeable emotions or sensations, as the advance of an army against its enemy.

"Were the enemy's tactics offensive?" the king asked. "I should say so!" replied the unsuccessful general. "The blackguard wouldn't come out of his works!"

OLD, adj. In that stage of usefulness which is not inconsistent with general inefficiency, as an old man. Discredited by lapse of time and offensive to the popular taste, as an old book.

"Old books? The devil take them!" Goby said.
"Fresh every day must be my books and bread."
Nature herself approves the Goby rule
And gives us every moment a fresh fool.
Harley Shum

OLEAGINOUS, adj. Oily, smooth, sleek.

Disraeli once described the manner of Bishop Wilberforce as "unctuous, oleaginous, saponaceous." And the good prelate was ever afterward known as Soapy Sam. For every man there is something in the vocabulary that would stick to him like a second skin. His enemies have only to find it.

OLYMPIAN, adj. Relating to a mountain in Thessaly, once inhabited by gods, now a repository of yellowing newspapers, beer bottles and mutilated sardine cans, attesting the presence of the tourist and his appetite.

His name the smirking tourist scrawls
Upon Minerva's temple walls,
Where thundered once Olympian Zeus,
And marks his appetite's abuse.
Averil Joop

OMEN, n. A sign that something will happen if nothing happens.

ONCE, adv. Enough.

OPERA, n. A play representing life in another world, whose inhabitants have no speech but song, no motions but gestures and no postures but attitudes. All acting is simulation, and the word simulation is from simia, an ape; but in opera the actor takes for his model Simia audibilis (or Pithecanthropos stentor)—the ape that howls.

The actor apes a man—at least in shape;
The opera performer apes and ape.

OPIATE, n. An unlocked door in the prison of Identity. It leads into the jail yard.

OPPORTUNITY, n. A favorable occasion for grasping a disappointment.

OPPOSE, v. To assist with obstructions and objections.

How lonely he who thinks to vex
With bandinage the Solemn Sex!
Of levity, Mere Man, beware;
None but the Grave deserve the Unfair.
Percy P. Orminder

OPPOSITION, n. In politics the party that prevents the Government from running amuck by hamstringing it.

The King of Ghargaroo, who had been abroad to study the science of government, appointed one hundred of his fattest subjects as members of a parliament to make laws for the collection of revenue. Forty of these he named the Party of Opposition and had his Prime Minister carefully instruct them in their duty of opposing every royal measure. Nevertheless, the first one that was submitted passed unanimously. Greatly displeased, the King vetoed it, informing the Opposition that if they did that again they would pay for their obstinacy with their heads. The entire forty promptly disemboweled themselves.

"What shall we do now?" the King asked. "Liberal institutions cannot be maintained without a party of Opposition."

"Splendor of the universe," replied the Prime Minister, "it is true these dogs of darkness have no longer their credentials, but all is not lost. Leave the matter to this worm of the dust."

So the Minister had the bodies of his Majesty's Opposition embalmed and stuffed with straw, put back into the seats of power and nailed there. Forty votes were recorded against every bill and the nation prospered. But one day a bill imposing a tax on warts was defeated—the members of the Government party had not been nailed to their seats! This so enraged the King that the Prime Minister was put to death, the parliament was dissolved with a battery of artillery, and government of the people, by the people, for the people perished from Ghargaroo.

OPTIMISM, n. The doctrine, or belief, that everything is beautiful, including what is ugly, everything good, especially the bad, and everything right that is wrong. It is held with greatest tenacity by those most accustomed to the mischance of falling into adversity, and is most acceptably expounded with the grin that apes a smile. Being a blind faith, it is inaccessible to the light of disproof—an intellectual disorder, yielding to no treatment but death. It is hereditary, but fortunately not contagious.

OPTIMIST, n. A proponent of the doctrine that black is white.

A pessimist applied to God for relief.

"Ah, you wish me to restore your hope and cheerfulness," said God.

"No," replied the petitioner, "I wish you to create something that would justify them."

"The world is all created," said God, "but you have overlooked something—the mortality of the optimist."

ORATORY, n. A conspiracy between speech and action to cheat the understanding. A tyranny tempered by stenography.

ORPHAN, n. A living person whom death has deprived of the power of filial ingratitude—a privation appealing with a particular eloquence to all that is sympathetic in human nature. When young the orphan is commonly sent to an asylum, where by careful cultivation of its rudimentary sense of locality it is taught to know its place. It is then instructed in the arts of dependence and servitude and eventually turned loose to prey upon the world as a bootblack or scullery maid.

ORTHODOX, n. An ox wearing the popular religious joke.

ORTHOGRAPHY, n. The science of spelling by the eye instead of the ear. Advocated with more heat than light by the outmates of every asylum for the insane. They have had to concede a few things since the time of Chaucer, but are none the less hot in defence of those to be conceded hereafter.

A spelling reformer indicted
For fudge was before the court cicted.
The judge said: "Enough—
His candle we'll snough,
And his sepulchre shall not be whicted."

OSTRICH, n. A large bird to which (for its sins, doubtless) nature has denied that hinder toe in which so many pious naturalists have seen a conspicuous evidence of design. The absence of a good working pair of wings is no defect, for, as has been ingeniously pointed out, the ostrich does not fly.

OTHERWISE, adv. No better.

OUTCOME, n. A particular type of disappointment. By the kind of intelligence that sees in an exception a proof of the rule the wisdom of an act is judged by the outcome, the result. This is immortal nonsense; the wisdom of an act is to be juded by the light that the doer had when he performed it.

OUTDO, v.t. To make an enemy.

OUT-OF-DOORS, n. That part of one's environment upon which no government has been able to collect taxes. Chiefly useful to inspire poets.

I climbed to the top of a mountain one day
To see the sun setting in glory,
And I thought, as I looked at his vanishing ray,
Of a perfectly splendid story.

'Twas about an old man and the ass he bestrode
Till the strength of the beast was o'ertested;
Then the man would carry him miles on the road
Till Neddy was pretty well rested.

The moon rising solemnly over the crest
Of the hills to the east of my station
Displayed her broad disk to the darkening west
Like a visible new creation.

And I thought of a joke (and I laughed till I cried)
Of an idle young woman who tarried
About a church-door for a look at the bride,
Although 'twas herself that was married.

To poets all Nature is pregnant with grand
Ideas—with thought and emotion.
I pity the dunces who don't understand
The speech of earth, heaven and ocean.
Stromboli Smith

OVATION, n. n ancient Rome, a definite, formal pageant in honor of one who had been disserviceable to the enemies of the nation. A lesser "triumph." In modern English the word is improperly used to signify any loose and spontaneous expression of popular homage to the hero of the hour and place.

"I had an ovation!" the actor man said,
But I thought it uncommonly queer,
That people and critics by him had been led
By the ear.

The Latin lexicon makes his absurd
Assertion as plain as a peg;
In "ovum" we find the true root of the word.
It means egg.
Dudley Spink

OVEREAT, v. To dine.

Hail, Gastronome, Apostle of Excess,
Well skilled to overeat without distress!
Thy great invention, the unfatal feast,
Shows Man's superiority to Beast.
John Boop

OVERWORK, n. A dangerous disorder affecting high public functionaries who want to go fishing.

OWE, v. To have (and to hold) a debt. The word formerly signified not indebtedness, but possession; it meant "own," and in the minds of debtors there is still a good deal of confusion between assets and liabilities.

OYSTER, n. A slimy, gobby shellfish which civilization gives men the hardihood to eat without removing its entrails! The shells are sometimes given to the poor.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

6 LETTER WORDS: R E D A R E

3 letter words ARE EAR ERA ERE ERR RAD RED 4 letter words DARE DEAR DEER RARE READ REAR REED 5 letter words DARER DREAR EARED ERRED 6 letter words DEARER READER REARED REREAD