What new word did you learn today?

Not quite a word, but a sound effect: splortch!

This is the sound a rotten tomato makes when it hits a malefactor sitting in the stocks (or standing in the pillory). ;)
 
Not quite a word, but a sound effect: splortch!

This is the sound a rotten tomato makes when it hits a malefactor sitting in the stocks (or standing in the pillory). ;)
I miss tomatoes that splattered. The over engineered ones now bounce!
 
I miss tomatoes that splattered. The over engineered ones now bounce!

On the plus side, if you accidentally drop one, it won't splortch all over your kitchen floor.

On the minus side, they might bounce, but you still can't use them as mini-basketballs. ;)
 
contronym - a word that has two opposite meanings, for example:

Bolt – to secure / to move quickly
Cleave – to split apart / to cling to
Clip – to fasten / to cut away
Resign – to quit / to commit to
 
"We apologise for this accidental censorship which was caused by some overly sensitive filters." Ah, yes. "No sex please, we're English". ;)

I wonder what these filters would make of places like Scunthorpe. Or Grope Lane, Shrewsbury (so called because it was once part of a -- ahem -- 'Red Light' district).
 
Aberllynfi.

It's Welsh for "three cocks".
Sorry to spoil the fun, but "Three Cocks" is the name the Saeson (the English) imposed on the village. The Welsh means "The Mouth of the River Llynfi." (You see the same formation with "Aberystwyth," "Aberbran," "Abergavenny," and so on.) The place where Afon Llynfi meets the River Wye is a little to the north.

If you want "Three Cocks" yn Gymraig, try "Tri Ceiliogod." Coc-a-dwdl-dŵ, go-go-go!
 
If you want "Three Cocks"

Some farmers might, especially if they were chicken farmers -- and especially if they had a poultry supply of cockerels.

(What? Some people can't take a yolk. But I'd better leave before I get egg on my face) ;)
 
And here's a new word I just learned: Cattywampus, meaning askew. (orig. Midland and Southern US, c. 1834).

It can also refer to something that is "catty-corner" (diagonal) or in complete disarray. The word likely evolved from the Greek prefix "cata-" (downward) and the Scottish word "wampish" (to wriggle or twist about).
 
Epistemics, noun, singular, the scientific study of knowledge, its acquisition and its communication.

Epistemic, adjective, relating to knowledge, epistemology or epistemics.

(From Chambers Dictionary, 1993]

Heard it for the first time on a YouTube video about the domain creep of therapy-speak in modern life.
 
Epistemics, noun, singular, the scientific study of knowledge, its acquisition and its communication.

Epistemic, adjective, relating to knowledge, epistemology or epistemics.

(From Chambers Dictionary, 1993]

Heard it for the first time on a YouTube video about the domain creep of therapy-speak in modern life.

I heard it first during one of Sir Humphrey's speeches. Here it is:


Humphrey's explanation is splendid. "You ... lied." ;)
 
I heard it first during one of Sir Humphrey's speeches. Here it is:


Humphrey's explanation is splendid. "You ... lied." ;)
The funny thing is, I've known the words "epistemology" and "epistemological" these past three decades, (even if I did struggle to get my mind around what they actually meant). But when I heard that YouTube analyst say "epistemic" a day or two ago, at first I thought he'd made it up!
 
The funny thing is, I've known the words "epistemology" and "epistemological" these past three decades, (even if I did struggle to get my mind around what they actually meant). But when I heard that YouTube analyst say "epistemic" a day or two ago, at first I thought he'd made it up!
It's a wonky word, basically referring to the overall philosophy of knowledge, but it doesn't have a strong/common contextual usage outside of the philosophical. I don't think I've ever written it, and if I did, I was probably just looking for a big word.
 
Epistemic knowledge is also used in science - it refers to how scientific knowledge is gathered,

i.e. understanding the process of science
 
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