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message 1: by Reggia (new)

Reggia Share a word you've just learned from a current book you're reading.


message 2: by Reggia (last edited Feb 10, 2013 11:38AM) (new)

Reggia I've seen the following but never knew what it meant.

palimpsest - (1) writing material (as a parchment or tablet) used one or more times after earlier writing has been erased; (2)something having usually diverse layers or aspects apparent beneath the surface

Each one of us is a palimpsest on which our parents have written, and beneath their writing is the writing of their parents. Thus is family pathology transmitted, and although behavioural geneticists may argue amongst themselves how genes determine behaviour the rest of us have no difficulty in seeing familiar traits being passed on from parent to child to grandchild.
~from The Importance of Being Seven by Alexander McCall Smith


message 3: by Werner (last edited Feb 05, 2013 03:41PM) (new)

Werner toque-- "a woman's small brimless hat made in any of various soft close-fitting shapes."

"...small chic black toque perched at the fashionable outrageous angle." --from Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie


message 4: by Werner (new)

Werner As an added note to the definition of "toque," I've been told by a Canadian-born Goodreader that, in Canadian English (Christie, of course, wrote in British English), a toque is a woolen cap similar to what's known in the U.S. as a stocking cap, and worn by both males and females.


message 5: by Margaret (new)

Margaret Metz orthography---the conventional spelling system of a language

from Every Perfect Gift by Dorothy Love


message 6: by Reggia (last edited Feb 10, 2013 11:34AM) (new)

Reggia ineluctable - not to be avoided, changed, or resisted

"These new things were not familiar, not led up to by the old, they were unchosen, determined by an ineluctable reality, and as sudden as an earthquake."


~from Dr Zhivago


message 7: by Nicole (new)

Nicole anoesis: a state of mind consisting of pure sensation or emotion without cognitive content

(The name of the fisherman's boat in the "Non Sequitur" cartoon)


message 8: by Reggia (last edited Feb 17, 2013 09:33AM) (new)

Reggia I love how once one becomes aware of something, we notice it more and more often. Thanks! I looked it up on a cache search:

"This is a strange thing, too, when you come to think of it, because the clubfoot, just like death, was another ineluctable fact. Yet the clubfoot dropped out of mind, or, what is more important, all that had been attached to the clubfoot. In the same way, having accepted death, death, too, dropped out of Grover’s mind." ~Tropic of Capricorn


That little passage (and the few lines before it) has caught my interest -- adding this to my TO READ list.


message 9: by Werner (last edited Mar 15, 2013 06:55AM) (new)

Werner boudin --"meat shaped like a sausage and served as an entree."

"...boudin in heaps instead of fried into balls, piled in a heated serving tray" --from Skinwalker by Faith Hunter


message 10: by Werner (new)

Werner luteous --"of a golden-yellow or orange-yellow color."

"A luteous moon rose from behind the phalanxes of barren rock-ribbed peaks...." --from "Six-Gun Bride of the Teton Bunch" by Les Savage Jr.


message 11: by Werner (new)

Werner bollard-- "A post on a dock or in a boat, to which a hawser is made fast."

"'By the gods,' said the first mate as he slipped the docking-rope over the bollard." --from "An Exchange of Favors" by Dorothy J. Heydt


message 12: by Werner (last edited Sep 24, 2014 09:26AM) (new)

Werner mullion-- "Vertical bar dividing panes or sash in a window."

"In the light from the mullioned front windows, bolts of blue and crimson cloth shone like jewels." --from "Nor Iron Bars a Cage" by Deborah Wheeler


message 13: by Janelle (new)

Janelle PUMPKINIFICATION - The act of turning into a pumpkin; usually in jocular opposition to deification.
This isn't from a book I'm currently reading, but is the title of a text by Seneca called "APOCOLOCYNTOSIS, OR LUDUS DE MORTE CLAUDII: THE PUMPKINIFICATION OF CLAUDIUS". I just couldn't resist it!


message 14: by Reggia (new)

Reggia LOL... so this has nothing to do with fairytale carriages?


message 15: by Nicole (new)

Nicole LOL, too!


message 16: by Janelle (new)

Janelle Nope, I thought it was hilarious. But my 17 year old daughter who's been studying ancient history said its quite a common term. I think I went down a little in her estimation when she discovered there was a word she knew that I didn't.


message 17: by Reggia (last edited May 16, 2014 11:36AM) (new)

Reggia In reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, the term "chatauqua" comes up and I see it has something to do with disambiguation. I'm not sure I understand it completely (despite google and wikipedia). Would anyone like to take a stab at explaining it? please?! :-p


message 18: by Nicole (new)

Nicole My understanding is that it's an educational historical lecture delivered by a person playing the role of a historical personage.


message 19: by Reggia (last edited May 16, 2014 08:39PM) (new)

Reggia That is a different take. In Chatauqua, they had (maybe still have) educational lectures... The author, though, seems to be using it as an experience, learning, I suppose? how to tell something from another?


message 20: by Werner (last edited Feb 19, 2015 06:22AM) (new)

Werner glaucous-- "Bluish-green or yellowish-green."

"The tenderness of their green appeared under the glaucous mantle...." --from Lorna Doone by Richard Doddridge Blackmore


message 21: by Werner (new)

Werner architraves --"Collective name for the various parts (lintel, jambs, and their mouldings) that surround a doorway or window."

"Under white fantastic arches, and long tunnels freaked and fretted, and between pellucid pillars jagged with nodding architraves, the red impetuous torrent rushed...."

videlicit --"'That is to say;' 'namely;' 'to wit;' used to introduce an amplification, or ...explanation, of a previous statement or word... esp. in legal documents."

"I was greatly vexed with my own hesitation, stupidity, or shyness, or whatever else it was, which had held me back from saying... what was in my heart to say, videlicit, that I must die unless she let me love her."

patin --Archaic spelling of "paten," which means "a thin, circular piece of metal."

"The full moon rose as bright behind me as a patin of pure silver...."

LIke "glaucous" in the previous post, all three of these terms come from Lorna Doone.


message 22: by Werner (new)

Werner cloche-- "A transparent covering used to protect or force delicate plants."

"I'd weathered the winter with cabbages in the open, lettuce under cloches." --from The Haunting of Gad's Hall by Norah Lofts


message 23: by Werner (new)

Werner frit --"The matter of which glass is made after it has been calcined."

"Those jars contain frit. It's ground glass. Most of the frit I use is a very fine powder. But I often use frit that has larger grains for my bigger sculptures." --from Saint Sebastian's Head by Leann Neal Reilly


message 24: by Reggia (new)

Reggia miasma - 1) "a highly unpleasant or unhealthy smell or vapor"; 2) an oppressive or unpleasant atmosphere that surrounds or emanates from something

"He turned the handle, calling out, “Sister? Sister!� He was met by a miasma at once familiar and alarming, but he couldn't place it."

~from Cutting for Stone


message 25: by Werner (last edited May 05, 2015 05:38AM) (new)

Werner gusset --"A triangular piece of cloth inserted in a garment to enlarge or reinforce it."

"The gussets that her village blacksmith had had to put up each side of her chainmail jerkin were put to the test in the last few yards before she reached Litfusia's cave." --from "The Old Fire" by Jody Lynn Nye


message 26: by Werner (new)

Werner knickerbockers --"Wide breeches gathered at or below the knee."

billycock --"[Brit.] A soft felt hat, round, and low in the crown; a bowler, or low-crowned stiff felt hat."

"He was a smallish man ...dressed rather loudly in a bright brown knickerbocker suit, the breeches very tight, with navy blue stockings, black boots, and a billycock hat."

--from Cakes and Ale by W. Somerset Maugham


message 27: by Werner (last edited Jul 15, 2015 03:21PM) (new)

Werner pouffe --"A stuffed cushion."

"...there was a great pouffe in the middle of the room."

--Also from Cakes and Ale


message 28: by Werner (new)

Werner anamnesis --"A recollection of past events."

"Brandon's anamnesis was broken by the truck rolling to a stop."

--from The Strong One by David Wittlinger


message 29: by Werner (new)

Werner curvet --"to leap as a horse, to frisk or bound."

"From time to time he made his beast curvet, and laughed at himself inwardly for doing it."

--from Black Amazon of Mars by Leigh Brackett


message 30: by Nina (new)

Nina "apocryphal" unauthentic, not canonical, spurious or fictitous, from the book, "Truman," by David McCullough.


message 31: by Werner (last edited Nov 23, 2016 07:02PM) (new)

Werner cresset --"An open frame of iron in which oil or wood is burned, used as a torch or lantern."

"Cressets burned, giving off a flickering brilliance and a smell of strong oil."

--from Black Amazon of Mars by Leigh Brackett


message 32: by Werner (last edited Mar 08, 2017 05:06PM) (new)

Werner bollard --"a post on a dock or in a boat, to which a hawser is made fast."

"The bodies crashed into a bollard and then disappeared from sight as they dropped into the murky waters of the Thames below."

--from Demon's Night by Guido Henkel


message 33: by Reggia (last edited Mar 21, 2017 04:06PM) (new)

Reggia ineluctable - unable to be resisted or avoided; inescapable

"She lay there thinking of it, the pain was deep, deep and ineluctable."

~from Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton


message 34: by Werner (new)

Werner scorbutic --"Of, pertaining to, resembling, or afflicted with scurvy."

"We found him sure enough, a huge, coarse, red-faced, scorbutic man, with a pair of vivid black eyes which were the only external sign of the very cunning mind within."

--from "The Adventure of the Illustrious Client" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle


message 35: by Nina (new)

Nina Werner wrote: "cloche-- "A transparent covering used to protect or force delicate plants."

"I'd weathered the winter with cabbages in the open, lettuce under cloches." --from The Haunting of Gad's Hall by Norah ..."
Also refers to women's hats in the twenties and thirties. I wore one when I was in Robert Altman's movie, "Kansas City," and it was the time frame of 1934.


message 36: by Werner (new)

Werner Nina, I did not know that! Thanks for sharing.


message 37: by Werner (new)

Werner jalousie --"a kind of window, door, shutter, etc. made with horizontal wood, metal, or glass slats that can be adjusted."

"The clerestories are mostly barred, fixed-pane windows, but there's a set of jalousies on either end."

--from The Collection by Lance Charnes


message 38: by Reggia (new)

Reggia vertiginous - causing vertigo, especially by being extremely high or steep

"He’d lived so long in anticipation of his own death that to contemplate his future was like standing at the edge of a cliff, staring into a vertiginous rush of open sky."

~from The Gollem and the Jinni


message 39: by Reggia (new)

Reggia Nina, you've acted in movies? Anything else of which we might be familiar?


message 40: by Linda (new)

Linda Nina wrote: "Werner wrote: "cloche-- "A transparent covering used to protect or force delicate plants."

"I'd weathered the winter with cabbages in the open, lettuce under cloches." --from The Haunting of Gad's..."


Nina, you are absolutely fascinating!


message 41: by Nina (new)

Nina I was in Robert Altman's "Kansas City," movie/only an extra but one night of filming I was the only woman and had my own trailer and Italian hair dresser. Lots of fun. Also, many years before I was in Cannes and took a picture of the building where the film festival is held each year never dreaming I'd be in a movie that was shown at one of their festivals.


message 42: by Nina (new)

Nina aphasic/"She could right now be developing any number of different aphasias, each more frightening than the next and could by dawn be condemned to communicating through expletives and baffling gestures. " From the book, "Amy Falls Down," by Jincy Willett.

Aphasic : Loss of the impairment of being able to understand speech or speak


message 43: by Reggia (new)

Reggia What a wonderful experience, Nina!


message 44: by Werner (new)

Werner ruche --"frilled or pleated lace, net, ribbon, etc., used for edging dresses, etc., as at the throat or wrists."

"The 1950s red velvet dress had a square neckline and a ruched waist flaring into a full pleated skirt with tulle underlay."

--from The Hunter and the Witch by Rachel Chanticleer


message 45: by Werner (new)

Werner reredos [pronounced as "rear-dose"] --"an ornamental screen behind an altar."

"A stone altar stood before an elaborate reredos, brightly painted and shining with gold leaf, which framed an austerely carved crucifix."

--from Farhope [not yet published] by Andrew M. Seddon.


message 46: by Werner (new)

Werner pritchel --"a type of punch used in forging, particularly in making nail holes in horseshoes."

"He relaxed for a moment, letting his pritchel and rounding hammer hang loosely in his hands."

--from The Blacksmith's Bravery by Susan Page Davis


message 47: by Nina (new)

Nina "I hadn't had a bite to eat since yesterday; so Jim got out some "corn-dodgers" and buttermilk,and pork and cabbage and greens and there ain't nothing in the world so good to eat when it's cooked right." From "Huckleberry Finn," by Mark Twain

"Corn-dodgers" are cornbread biscuits.


message 48: by Janelle (new)

Janelle What a coincidence, I just finished reading Huckleberry Finn. But I didn't go to the effort of looking up the meaning of corn dodgers. I'm sure there were plenty of words I didn't know the meaning of, but it just added to the book's ambience.


message 49: by Werner (new)

Werner cantle --"the part of a saddle that curves upward at the rear."

"Mac Marcy turned in the saddle and, resting his left hand on the cantle, glanced back up the arroyo."

--from "Fork Your Own Broncs" by Louis L'Amour


message 50: by Nina (new)

Nina Good one Werner/ in spite of my daughter having at least one horse in the past forty years I never had heard that term before this.


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