Danziger and McCrum have assembled an impressive--and fun--collection of true terms for things people use and see everyday but are unsure of what they are called. Whimsical and informative, this... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I love quirky words. Just wish I could remember all of them as I have about 10 dictionary's with odd words.
book review
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Awesome book - very interesting - lots of stuff to learn about things that you know nothing about - Quick read and something to share with all your friends.
Deliciously obscure names for objects you didn't know had them!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
After such an exhaustive title there's no need for me to explain what this book covers. Faithful readers of my entries already know I am mad keen on English vocabulary, and this little treasure has proven most illustrative. I first gazed over the table of contents, which is a list of the terms explored, and tried finding some which I already knew. I was pleasantly surprised at recognizing several of them: aglet, which is the plastic casing which seals off the end of a shoelace borborygmus, the gurgling sounds emitted from the stomach crozier, the ceremonial shepherd's crook bourne by bishops, cardinals, and the Pope fontanelle, the soft spot on a baby's head interrobang, a double-duty punctuation mark that looks like this ?! philtrum, the small indentation between the upper lip and nose Of course I was terribly interested in the many other words I'd never learned. Some of the more interesting ones include: caruncula, the tiny pink corner of the eyeball (and the medical term for "sleepy dust" is rheum, which accumulates in the caruncula) drupelets, the little globules that compose a raspberry or blackberry grawlix, a string of symbols used to represent a spoken obscenity in a cartoon muselet, the small wire cage used to keep the cork in place on a champagne bottle purlicue, the span of measurement made between the extension of the index finger and thumb rowel, the spiked, revolving wheel located at the tip of a spur on a cowboy boot tmesis, the deliberate hyphenation of a word for effect (i.e., un-freaking-fair) The authors not only elaborate as to what each word describes, but many articles list similar terms as well. An example is the entry for tmesis, which also elucidates the reader on other lesser-heard figures of speech, such as antonomasia (using a proper name to describe someone, such as "She's such a Martha Stewart" for a woman who is freakishly obsessed with crafting overdone dinner parties) and metonymy (using the name of a facet of something to describe the thing in it's entirety, such as referring to Harrisburg when one really means the state government of the Commonwealth). Each entry's language of origin and, where applicable, inventor (grawlix is apparently but one of a lexicon of cartoon terms coined by Mort Walker, author of the venerated strip Beetle Bailey) are very capably discussed as well. The Whatchamacallit is certain to entertain and edify the vocabularean in all of us.
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