Words and Names, v. 2011

Words & names you ♥ or just want to talk about.

Continued from v. 2009.

This entry was posted in The Universe, Things We like. Bookmark the permalink.

303 Responses to Words and Names, v. 2011

  1. Errata says:

    I love finding words which are really fun to say. Examples:
    Artichoke. Cow. (Enunciate it extremely clearly, and sort of stretch the ‘ow’). Marshmallow. Potato. Spluge (Which isn’t a real word, but should be).

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  2. Axa says:

    cellar door

    /obligatory

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  3. Choklit Orange says:

    Beige. Which to me is actually a very red word.

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  4. LittleBasementKitten says:

    Foofle. I was off one letter from Google, and that’s what happened. What should it mean?

    @Choklit Orange: Are you a synthe…synth…person who has synthesis? :oops:

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    • Selenium the Quafflebird says:

      Synthesis? :lol: I think you mean synesthesia?

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      • LittleBasementKitten says:

        Pff. Yes. *headwall*

        Anyways, are you? Because that would be awesome if you were.

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        • FantasyFan?!?! says:

          Having synthesis would be pretty cool as well, though. Being able to combine together all kinds of different things into even more awesome things.Maybe you could combine with them as well, and become some superhuman-awesome thing combination.

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  5. Selenium the Quafflebird says:

    Syzygy. It’s so much fun to say, especially when you say it quickly.

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  6. Randomostiy 101 says:

    Cheese is fun to say. So is zit. And starring. And onomatopoeia. And Australopithecus. And Cnidarian.

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  7. Cat's Eye says:

    Quark. Quark quark quark!
    Reference, anyone?

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  8. shadowfire says:

    Susurrus. Cavort. Soliloquy.

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  9. vanillabean3.141 says:

    Splendor.

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  10. Mikazuki says:

    Haberdashery. I love that word. Zeppelin. It sounds so…zippy, I dunno. I love spelling words slightly differently and using them for names. Whether these are good names or not remains to be seen. But Crimsyn is rather nice, don’t you think? ;)

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  11. Bibliophile says:

    I love the sound of pickelhaube, pfeffernusse, floccinaucinaucinihilipilificate, higgledy-piggledy, and einkorn–and cnidnarian is nice, too, though I’d never thought of it while trying to find favorite words. I also love neologism for its double meanings.
    I really love etymology! It’s really, really fascinating.
    The word crotchet is very convenient when you get a brooch version (or 4) of an eccentric interest (like tardigrades!).
    I also love the names Lucy and Lysander.

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  12. oobatooba says:

    Tingo: one who acquires all the objects in a friends house that they desire by borrowing and never returning.

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  13. KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

    “Terraqueous”. Especially if you stretch out the syllables like Carl Sagan.

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  14. speller73 says:

    Ooh, one of these threads! I used to post on these things like crazy!

    Anyways…

    Sesquipedalian
    Schadenfreude
    Bewusstseinslage

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  15. Mago Berry says:

    WWWWWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRRDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    *toomanyexclamationpoints*
    Eh, ’tis my word. It means the essence of Muserlyness.
    And P.S.: Riboflavin, when pronounced like rib-oh-flav-in instead of the normal (and thus worse) way, ribe-oh-flay-vin, is extremely awesome. Try it, and thou shalt be addicted.
    All right! Names!
    I like making up names off the top of my head, or thinking about them really hard and coming up with something that sounds nothing like the original.

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  16. Ducky says:

    Ukelele. Scribe. Decapitate.

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  17. shadowfire says:

    We are examining blephorisma(-ae? Not sure) in bio. Blephorisma is an excellent word.

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  18. oobatooba says:

    Defenestration is a lovely word, and it just showed up in my favorite comic :smile:

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    • KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

      Ha ha, yes! Defenestrate sounds so much fun.

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      • LittleBasementKitten says:

        According to my dictionary, “defenestrate” means to throw something or someone out of a window. So yes, it does sound fun!

        *defenestrates Kai*

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        • Koko's Apprentice (Save the Muse Scouts!) says:

          *Defenestrates tau*
          Fun word, yes

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          • oobatooba says:

            *Defenestrates pie at random civilian :arrow: *
            SPOILER! SPOILER! OOTS SEMI SPOILER! SPOILER ALERT! OOTS SPOILER! ( THIS IS A SEMI SPOILER. IF YOU ACTUALLY READ OOTS AND HAVE NOT GOTTEN TO THIS POINT YOU MAY HAVE A FUNNY PART SPOILED, BUT IF YOU HAVE NEVER HEARD OF OOTS AND DON’T READ IT THAN YOU WILL NOT HAVE ANYTHING SPOILED FOR YOU)
            Yes, and it’s even better when used in the line “Elan, I’m sorry for defenestrating your girlfriend, but…. I am your evil long lost dad.”

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  19. Choklit Orange says:

    Pituitary. And skuttlebut. Skuttlebut is delightfully pirate.

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  20. Mago Berry says:

    I’m glad the GAPAs caught that. ;) “Wierd” means, according to Mago Berry’s Dictionary of Randomness, “something that has a quality of abnormality, yet invokes awe in passersby, aka, weird, yet amazingly original.
    Syn.: Random, weird, awesome, Muserly.
    Ant.: Stupid, uncreative, straightforward, normal.

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  21. Randomostiy 101 says:

    Zing. Who doesn’t love the word “zing”? And mycorrhiza. And nudibranch. And astringent. And… Yeah, I think I’ll stop there.

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  22. Sudo says:

    Octopodes. Especially because it’s pronounced ok-top-o-deez. :D

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  23. Mikazuki says:

    l’anniversie (I’m not even going to attempt to spell that correctly…gah! French spelling!) and astrolabe. They’re both so fun to say.

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  24. Bibliophile says:

    Sphygmomanometer!
    Whatchamacallits is chock-full of wonderful names for ordinary things. There are dozens more that I could say right now, but it would take too long. I just bought it, and it’s really good.

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    • Bibliophile says:

      Actually, I just realized that I mean The Whatchamacallit, not Whatchamacallits. I must have been thinking of the Muse article.

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  25. KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

    Whatsit.

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  26. Bibliophile says:

    The device doctors use to measure your blood pressure

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  27. Choklit Orange says:

    Heffalump.

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  28. Koko's Apprentice says:

    singing

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  29. Bibliophile says:

    Viscacha

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  30. KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

    Resonance.

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  31. Unintended Pun says:

    Favourite names:
    Marcelas
    Gretchen
    Guillaume
    Lukas

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  32. Ducky says:

    Twonk. It’s probably the best British slang insult ever.

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  33. Vendaval says:

    Rabelaisian.

    Found in a book on sea shanties, it refers to a 15th century French writer famous for his bawdy songs. As far as I can tell, it is unrelated to ‘rabble’.

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  34. Pseudonym says:

    Is anyone else mildly disturbed by how similar Bunnified and Bona Fide sound?

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  35. Bibliophile says:

    Erkling, floccinaucinihilipilification, chyme!

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  36. Bibliophile says:

    SFTDP, and I just realized that I already said floccinaucinihilipilificate, and I misspelled pfeffernuss, but agog, voortreker (Did I spell that right, or are there 2 Ks?), qiviut, tenebrionid, pediddle, tittle, dibble, tesserae!

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  37. Mikazuki says:

    Bamboozle! Liquescent!

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  38. Trojan Tiger says:

    Doohickey, Thingamabob!

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  39. Bibliophile says:

    Katzenjammer, bibliotheca, bambino! Bibliophile! Xenomorphida, arctisconia!
    What does your name mean (this is directed at everyone, not a specifc person)? My first name means pure in Greek, my middle name is Noble, and my last name means good in a language I don’t want to say in case any stalkers reading this speak it or decide to look it up. Unfortunately, this means my Quenya name is Man (Ara) Man…

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    • Mikazuki says:

      Um, I think my first name, Kalie, means something like, “beloved” in Arabic. It is also a word for a…musical party(…? Something like that…) in Irish. An alternate spelling of my name is the Indian goddess of death, destruction, and creation, I believe.
      My parents’ name choice comes form the Arabic meaning, though. (Who wouldn’t want to name their child after the Indian goddess of dead? ;) )

      Erm…my middle name apparently means ‘twin’ although it’s my middle name because it was a surname of my grandmother so I found this out using Google, and I’m not positive this is correct.

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    • Ducky says:

      My first name is Cara, “friend” in Gaelic.

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    • Lizzie says:

      My first name is my grandmother’s anglicized name. My middle name means “peace” because I was born a few months after the end of the Gulf War. My other middle name is my mother’s last name, and it means Town Hall, and my last name means Oldfield.

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  40. KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

    Futhark.

    Frequency.

    Viscosity.

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  41. Cat's Meow says:

    My name means “Father in rejoicing” or “Father’s joy” in Hebrew. Hannah, my middle name, is also from Hebrew, and it means grace and favor.

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  42. Pseudonym says:

    Samisen
    Quincux
    Obloquy
    Ophicleide

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  43. Kokonilly says:

    Names? My first name means “listener of God” and my second name means “famous warrior”.
    Odd combination, if you ask me.

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  44. Trojan Tiger says:

    My first name means somber, father, priest, or father of exaltation. My middle name means famous warrior like Kokonilly’s.

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  45. Choklit Orange says:

    Names- I’m named after the Greek goddess of wisdom (Sophia). I’ve no idea what my middle name, Ellen, means, and my last name doesn’t mean much of anything in any language.

    Words I like:
    Tintinabulation
    Obsequious
    Macaronic

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    • Princess_Magnolia says:

      Athena is commonly known as the Greek goddess of wisdom. According to Wikipedia, “Sophia” is not the Greek goddess of wisdom but actually means “wisdom” in Greek. Interesting.

      For names, I like Massachusetts Pilgrims-era “virtue names”, such as Charity, Mercy, Patience, Chastity, etc.

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      • Choklit Orange says:

        Sorry, I confused it with the temple thingy. Well, it’s probably better to go through life with the name Sophia than the name Athena.

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        • Bibliophile says:

          I actually used to know someone named Athena. She was popular, and not very wise. I never actually heard anyone say anything about her name, but it seemed like going through life with it would be much easier than you’d expect–or maybe that’s only if it doesn’t suit you at all.

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          • Princess_Magnolia says:

            I would rather name my daughter Minerva, which is a better name and can be shortened to “Minnie.” Actually, Athena is a nice name too, but it would be weird to call someone that.

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  46. Enceladus says:

    Lipstick Like A Blanket

    Just try saying it, it’s insanely satisfying.

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  47. fireandhemlock1996 says:

    Re: Name meanings: My first name, Jennifer, is apparently Welsh in origin. I’ll just quote the website I found that had good information on names and such:
    “Jennifer comes from the Welsh name Gwenhwyfar, which is composed of the elements gwen meaning “fair, white” and hwyfar meaning “smooth”.”
    And in other places I found it means “white wave”. Which is pretty cool.
    My middle name is English in origin and means “laurel”.

    My parents didn’t choose my name for meaning… xD My middle name was my also my great-grandmother’s name, I have no idea where my first name came from.

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    • Enceladus says:

      My name is also Welsh in origin! Well, the male version is. The female version is Irish in origin, which leads to a few problems seeing as many people in my neighborhood have Irish ancestry. So everyone expects me to be a girl.

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  48. Pax the Hamster says:

    My first name is a month that means spring. My middle name means God’s promise. My last name is an occupation, in German.
    My parents chose my first name to honor my grandfather who died before I was born. His name was Fred and I am so glad they didn’t name me Frederika, and chose to go with his birth month instead. They say that my middle name was random, and they forgot that it was already my older sisters middle name. Three of my friends have the same middle name. :D

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    • shadowfire says:

      That would be… April/May Elizabeth?
      I have a Christian first and middle name and a Jewish last name. My brother has three Jewish names. I haven’t the faintest idea what my names mean.

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      • Pax the Hamster says:

        Yep, April Elizabeth. My older sister is Katherine Elizabeth, and our younger sister is Elizabeth Ann. And no one else in the family has an ‘Elizabeth’ at all. Quite random.

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  49. Pseudonym says:

    Wainscoting
    Sophie means wisdom I think. Argh.

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  50. Unintended Pun says:

    My name (Karin) is supposed to mean “pure” or something like that.
    I don’t know what my middle name means. (Taylor).
    My last name is a color in a language other than English.

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    • “Karin” is one version of a Scandinavian name equivalent to the English name “Katherine,” which comes from a Greek root meaning “pure” or “purification.” (It’s related to catharsis.)

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      • Unintended Pun says:

        Ahh! That makes sense. I knew it came from Catherine.
        I never make the connection between names and words. I just keep thinking that names have random meanings or come from words that are no longer used.

        Last year in Latin I found out that Argentum is silver, which explained both the periodic table symbol and the country named Argentina.

        Google translate thinks that “niska banja” means “ninja”. “Niska banja” is a Croatian song, and there is supposed to be a thingy on the “s” that makes it “sh”.
        Google translate is pretty clear on the lyrics of Dobro Dosli.

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        • Names used to be meaningful and rooted in history. In many parts of the world they still are. Random and made-up names have become popular in America only within the past 30 years or so, I think, as a result of what looks to me like massive historical and cultural amnesia. People think they’re absorbing more information than ever before, but at the same time, they’ve forgotten a lot.

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          • Unintended Pun says:

            Mhm. My Arabic friend knows the meanings of all of her family members’ names.
            Her name is Noor, or Nour. When she was born her parents wrote it one way on her birth certificate and then forgot how they spelled it and wrote it the other way on her Social Security card. So now she has a ton of cake to deal with trying to change one so she can have a verifiable name.
            Noor/Nour means “light” in Arabic.

            My friend says that instead of calling this the information age we should call it the entertainment age, because people are less informed while taking in larger amounts of media.

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          • In a number of circles, I’d say the case is not amnesia but repudiation.

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            • Unintended Pun says:

              This brings to mind my friend’s mother, who “[is] not Irish! [she’s] American!”.

              I don’t really understand the rejection of knowledge that some people have. I suppose it might amount to laziness, but I feel like that would be an overestimation of the power of laziness.
              To me, the desire to learn is so strong that I don’t imagine normal circumstances being able to quell it.

              I don’t know if this has been discussed, but I looked up “en” in the dictionary. It is a length of measure one half the length of the letter “m”.

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          • Koppar says:

            This is why any children I have when I grow up will have names from my family tree.

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            • Enceladus says:

              My name is from a welsh farmer that lived centuries ago! (That is why my parents chose it, they assure me.)

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              • Lizzie says:

                Neil Gaiman just reposted a post on his blog about his daughter Holly’s name:

                I dragged songs from her childhood over to the playlist — “Barcelona” and “Nothing Compares 2 U” and “I Don’t Like Mondays” and “These Foolish Things” and then came Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side”. “You named me from this song, didn’t you?” said Holly as the first bass notes sang. “Yup,” I said.

                Lou started singing.

                Holly listened to the first verse, and for the first time, actually heard the words.

                “Shaved her legs and then he was a she…? He?”

                “That’s right,” I said, and bit the bullet. We were having The Conversation. “You were named after a drag queen in a Lou Reed song.”

                She grinned like a light going on. “Oh dad. I do love you,” she said. Then she picked up an envelope and wrote what I’d just said down on the back, in case she forgot it.

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  51. Agent Lightning says:

    Ligature: The leather or metal part of the saxophone or clarinet that holds the reed onto the mouthpiece, still allowing for vibration.
    (There’s an alto sax player at our school called Reid. Reid=reed=alto sax=get it? Is that too corny?)

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  52. vanillabean3.141 says:

    Waistcoat
    Coxswain
    Puddles

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  53. Selenium the Quafflebird says:

    I think Isabelle (my name) and all its variants mean something along the lines of ‘God is my oath’…something like that, anyway. My name is the French spelling, but I don’t think I was named after anyone. I guess my parents just liked the name. According to them, I could have been Victoria or Monique, and if I had been a boy, I think I would have been named Arthur.

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  54. Selenium the Quafflebird says:

    SFTDP Forgot to add, my middle name is Amber. No idea where that came from either.

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  55. Zinc says:

    Actually, I have no idea what my name means. (Robin) I’ve seen “brilliant,” “the bird,” etc. I can’t seem to remember what Lynn means, but I know my parents chose it as A) a fallback and B) they thought it sounded nice with “Robin and my lastname, which is currently classified information I’m not at the liberty to divulge. ( < – I don't know; just wanted to write more with my tablet. *brags*)

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  56. Piggy says:

    First name: Daniel
    -Means something along the lines of “God’s judge” or “judged by God” or something to do with God and judgement
    -Chosen because A. nice name, and B. religious name

    Middle name: James
    -Means :?:
    -Chosen because father’s first name

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  57. bookgirl_me says:

    My first name means “the pearl”, I dunno what my second name means but it’s classically latin and the female version of the name of someone who bit the dust in march. My second middle name is a little more tricky, it’s supposed to mean hardworking according to the internet and is an old family name on my father’s side. The english version of the name was made famous by a famous (female) aviator; only one letter is different, probably changed because it sounds much nicer in english that way.

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  58. KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

    Bo’sun.

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  59. Unintended Pun says:

    I’ve been having issues lately with the use of “an”. It really annoyed me when people say “an historic event”, until I discovered that people also say “an hippopotamus” and “an human”. Now I’m just concerned that the “h” might have been silent at one time.
    I also wonder about “an” before vowels that don’t sound entirely vowel-like. For example, should I say “a one point shot” or “an one point shot”? I currently say and write “a one point shot”, because the “o” doesn’t start with a vowel sound, it starts with the “w” sound.

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    • Some people do use “an” before “h” when the “h” starts an unstressed syllable: an historian, but a history book. But it’s not required, and — in 21st-century America, at least — you’re never wrong if you say “a.”

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    • English is always changing. Some initial Hs that used to be silent aren’t any more and vice versa. Some are voiced or silent depending on which part of the English world you’re talking about. When I was a kid, I insisted on saying “an historic” and so forth, because that’s how those words appeared in the British books I read. But I think most speakers of U.S. English thought I was weird. To this day, “a historic” sounds painfully clumsy to my ears, and it potentially causes confusion with the word “ahistoric.”

      In general, the “a – an” distinction follows the sound of the words. Indeed many of the “an” constructions were originally “a” followed by a word beginning with “n,” such as “napron” (related to “napkin”) which eventually became “apron.”

      Here’s a brief article on the subject of indefinite articles used with initial Hs: www . worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-anh1.htm

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    • A related topic is the pronunciation of “the”: Long “e” before vowels and schwa before consonants. This often comes up in singing lessons or chorus; I don’t know whether anyone in the outside world spends much time worrying over it.

      (And yes, now that I’m thinking about it, I do say “thee historic,” “thee hotel,” and so forth.)

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      • Unintended Pun says:

        Ah! You both posted while I was writing.
        I did notice that it was a British article. :]
        My friend was dismayed a few days ago to find that his Latin dictionary spelled “connection” with an “x”. I suppose the British way is “connexion”? I like it spelled that way. It seems to be more true to the natural pronunciation.

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      • Rosebud2 says:

        Hmm… I’m not sure if I ever say “thee.” I don’t think I do. I never say “an h—-” either.

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  60. Unintended Pun says:

    Thanks, GAPAs!
    When Watson came on Jeopardy, Alex Trebek called it “an historic” event. It was weird to hear such old fashioned language in juxtaposition to such a modern event.

    There is a sound I don’t like. I can’t stand words like clog, plug, flog. They just sound so disgusting. Those words are like little 11 year old boys who think it’s fun to play in mud and laugh at fart jokes.

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  61. Bibliophile says:

    59.3: I actually didn’t know this I heard it in choir. I was quite surprised. I adhere to it, but no-one else I know seems to.
    Kinnikinick! Scofflaw! Vroom! Myrmecophile! Teleost! Bismuth! Zarf!
    My name wasn’t chosen for it’s meaning; my first one was apparently random. If I were to have children (though I plan to adopt instead), I’d want to choose their names for their meanings.
    Although I deinitely wouldn’t want to be named Vladimir(a), I like the sound of it. According to my favorite name website, the first part means to rule and the second part means peacefully or with greatness–though some people say that the ‘mir(a)’ part means world. For some reason, I seem to be the only one it occured to that it could mean ‘to peacefully and greatly rule the world’…

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    • Unintended Pun says:

      “mir” is a Russian word which means both “world” and “peace”.
      This is my favorite word in any language based on meaning.
      And somehow it never occurred to me that “Vladimir” contains “mir”. :P

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  62. Tesseract says:

    My name means “father’s joy” and was apparently popularized by Puritans. Now it’ll be even stranger if I read The Crucible again! Try having your class do part of a play in which characters are saying your name every twenty seconds, sometimes in really awkward contexts. However, my default threat now involves bringing a pointy reckoning that will shudder people :)

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    • Princess_Magnolia says:

      What’s your name?

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        • Selenium the Quafflebird says:

          That’s also my sister’s name. :)

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        • Tesseract says:

          Just Abby, actually. It’s not a nickname for Abigail in my case, though people tend to assume it is. I like the name Abigail better than Abby an my parents have offered to let me change it, but I’d feel weird doing that. I’m just Abby!

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          • Cat's Meow says:

            I’m the other half of “names derived from Abigail”, so I know exactly what you mean. :)

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          • Rosebud2 says:

            Oh, that reminds me of my brother. His name on his birth certificate is “Jake,” not “Jacob.”

            My name is Riley. It means either “valiant” or “a small stream.”

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            • I don’t understand why parents give children nicknames as given names. Take my friend Betty. If her parents had named her Elizabeth, she could still be Betty, but she could also be Elizabeth, Beth, Bess, Eliza, Liza, Liz, Lizzie, Lisa, or even Ebeth. She could “wear” a different name every day of the week, and then some! But because her parents named her Betty, she’s just Betty. She doesn’t mind, but it seems unduly limiting to me.

              The same goes for my cousin Jack, my sister-in-law Julie, and any number of other people I have met. (Come to think of it, I suppose Nancy Kangas is probably officially Nancy, too. “Nancy” started out as a nickname for Ann.)

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    • KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

      Your name is Abby and you did The Crucible in school? Ouch, that must have been awkward.

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  63. Cloudlander says:

    My name’s way too easy to guess if you know just a little bit of the Christian mythos.

    My name, when translated, means “Who is like god?” (Rhetorical question, don’t answer). I’m named after the archangel who slew Satan, and if I remember my dates correctly, then my birthday is on his feast day (March 19th).

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  64. Cloudlander says:

    @Piggy

    True, I got “slay” and “defeat” confused I guess. He’s usually pictured with sword held high over his head, and one foot holding satan down (Usually in snake form, however I have seen one statue somewhere where Satan is depicted as some form of Hell hound)

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  65. Trojan Tiger says:

    Automaton!!!! So fun to say!! Yay for vocabulary books!

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  66. Zinc says:

    A word I hate spelling: accept. I always try to write “except.”

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  67. oobatooba says:

    I just don’t like spelling anything…

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  68. Agent Lightning says:

    I almost was in a spelling bee… the worst word in the English language is concomitant. Grr.
    Egress: Exit.
    “This way to the egress”
    does not mean
    some sort of bird.
    I read that today in
    A Hat Full of Sky
    by Terry Pratchett
    whose books
    I have been reading
    a lot lately.
    I am typing this post in
    free form poetry
    and I do not know
    why.

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  69. Agent Lightning says:

    (SFTDP: It wasn’t even GOOD poetry. Drat.)

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  70. Midnight Fiddler says:

    Re: Naming children “nicknames” as a given name:
    I don’t get this either. I have a friend named Jamie Edward [lastname]. That is is name. Jamie Edward. Not James, Jamie. Why? I have no idea. Jamie fits him, and I’m sure it was adorable when he was a toddler, but he’s 19 now and it’s slightly strange that it’s his given name.
    I didn’t know Nancy was a nickname for Anne, but it kind of makes sense. My aunt’s name is Nansie, and her two kids (my cousins) are named Kinsley and Coale, both old family names. Another cousin’s name is Katie, not Katherine, Kaitlyn or any other name that one can get Katie out of, but Katie. Her sister is Leslie, which is yet another old family name, if I recall correctly.
    My dad is Kent, and is constantly called “Ken.” My grandmother goes by “Dee” because she hates her given name of Dolores. Personally I think she has a beautiful name, Dolores Yvonne, but she despises it. Crazy.

    As for me, I’m named after a spore producing plant, my middle name means springtime in Hebrew (which has led a few few people to think I’m Jewish. I’m not.), and my last name is common and German. No idea what it’s supposed to mean. My other last name (my dad’s last name, which is not legally mine, because my mother kept her maiden name when they married and her name ended up on my birth certificate and it sounds better anyway so whatever) is also German, but less common, as far as I can tell. It appears as part of other more common surnames though, most notably in a popular children’s song.

    Since my middle name starts with a vowel, my initials have the potential to spell out plenty of interesting things. I just need to never change my last name to something starting with a G or T, because then they’d spell “fag” or “fat.” Whoo-hoo.

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  71. Axa says:

    something i don’t understand…why would a nickname be longer than the given name?! i had no idea nancy was a nickname either, and that seems pretty ridiculous to me to be honest, it’s like someone is going out of their way to make things difficult. OY VEY

    My last name is a version of a relatively (?) common Irish surname, apparently the family dropped the “Mc” at the beginning to avoid discrimination when they came here. My mom’s maiden name has two writings in Japanese, one of which is apparently very nice and the other which means “rude, uncouth” etc…guess which one is ours? :lol: or at least that’s how the story goes

    my mom wanted to name me darius if i had been a boy, which i think would have been excellent.

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  72. Marfwarrior says:

    My first, middle, and last names are all common words in the english language. Makes googling myself a bit of a pain..

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  73. Mago Berry says:

    I was almost named Thea, which I think is an awesome name. Eh, well, now I get to be either a) thought of as a boy if the spelling is known, or b) called Sydney if the spelling is not known…

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  74. KaiYves- Go, STS-133! says:

    Kind of related- how does Peggy derive from Margaret?

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  75. Randomosity 101 (Pi Party Participant) says:

    I was named after my great-grandmother. But everybody thinks I was named after a character in a book-turned-movie. Even if they don’t think that, they joke about it. It drives me crazy. I wouldn’t mind so much if they compared me to the Magic School Bus character with the same name. At least I’m slightly similar to her. Oh, and my History teacher has started writing “Good job, Dot!” when I do well on a test. I’ve had a nickname, but it WASN’T Dot. Dot was my great-grandmother. I find it irrationally annoying.

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  76. Mago Berry says:

    Nobody cares who I’m named after. They’re just busy remembering to spell it wrong.

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  77. Randomosity 101 (Pi Party Participant) says:

    75.1- Yes. I have no problem with the name itself, but the way people keep insisting on making Wizard of Oz comments drives me caking crazy.

    76- Oh, that’s too bad. Who were you named after?

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    • *empathizes* When I was growing up my name was uncommon so I heard lots of references to “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.” Adults were worse than my peers, actually. One friend of my grandmother’s would say it every time she saw me.

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      • vanillabean3.141 says:

        Really? I always thought Rebecca was a not unusual, classy name. There’s even a famous novel called Rebecca.

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        • It’s experienced a major surge in popularity in the past couple of decades. I knew a couple of Beckys and a Bekah when I was in school, but I can’t remember meeting a Rebecca who actually went by Rebecca until I was well into adulthood. Now they’re everywhere. I find that rather disconcerting.

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  78. Bibliophile says:

    How is Margarethe pronounced?
    For some reason, it bothers me when the plurals of words that end in f (except when it’s ff, like in tariff) end in -fs rather than -ves. I’m not sure why, but it really doesn’t look right to me.
    I hate the words blub and gloss as well, and the syllable ‘gluh’ in general.

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  79. Mago Berry says:

    77– I was named after a great-great-great grandmother or so of mine. I like my name, actually, but people just tend to think that Sidney is the “boy” version.

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  80. Bibliophile says:

    I’m glad we have the word en. It’s really useful and convenient. I always hated the fact that there was no epicene pronoun, so I’m quite glad to have one now.

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  81. Mago Berry says:

    I use en as often as I can–unfortunately, when I tried to use it in a game of Scrabble, it was denied. Why can’t people be more open-minded??

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    • “En” is also a word in the world beyond MuseBlog. In typography (the design of typefaces or fonts), an en is the width of an uppercase N.

      Digression: In addition to hyphens, most fonts contain longer dashes called “en dashes” and “em dashes” used for different purposes. (In America, the em dash is the standard dash “—” used in punctuation. Brits tend to prefer the shorter en dash “–” instead.)

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    • Randomosity 101 (Pi Party Participant) says:

      I keep raving about how foolish people are for not adopting “En” into the standard English language. Especially now, in the age when people are communicating more and more with people they never see. We NEED to be able to use an epicene pronoun that everyone would understand!

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  82. Midnight Fiddler says:

    75 (Randomosity101)~ My parents didn’t even think of the Fern in Charlotte’s Web when they named me–it was my cousin who made the connection first when they showed me to her as an infant. I occasionally have people ask me how Wilbur is doing.
    There was also a Fern on the tv show Arthur.

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  83. Bibliophile says:

    I have the same first and last name as a softball player. Fortunately (as I hate softball), I’ve only ever met one person who’s actually heard of her, and she didn’t make the connection until I mentioned it.

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  84. Mago Berry says:

    My name is the name of the Dark-type Elite 4 member in Hoenn. Except he’s, well, a he. And has a red mohawk-ish hairdo. And has an electric guitar.

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  85. Bibliophile says:

    Why was everyone’s name chosen? Mine (Katie, which is short for Katherine) was just because my parents couldn’t agree on anything else. That May/June 2010 Muse article on nominative determinism scared me a bit, because it’s quite strange imagining what things might have been like if I’d been named something like India, which my mom wanted, or Tiffany/Courtney/Brittany, like my dad wanted. Those just don’t suit me at all.

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    • My parents named me in a moment of rebellion. I was the first born of my generation — and therefore supposed to be a boy (my mother’s stepmother wrote to my mom, “we’re so looking forward to the arrival of ‘little brother'”) — so there was loads of pressure to give me a family name. My parents chose “Rebecca” simply because they liked the name. When it came to my brothers, though, they capitulated entirely to family expectations. One is a junior and the other is named after both our grandfathers (he is thus saddled with Ralph and Augustus).

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    • Lizzie says:

      I’m named after my great-grandmother, whose name was something like Lipsi but was anglicized to Lizzie at Ellis Island.

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    • shadowfire says:

      I’m named after a dead relative (both first and middle name, but different people). I think that’s a Jewish thing, but it’s a Christian name. Hurm.
      Also, I have the same first name as J.K. Rowling, which is pretty darn cool. If only people would remember that it isn’t Joanna.

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      • Bibliophile says:

        Don’t worry; she had some trouble with that, too. The first time anyone ever referred to her as ‘Joanie’ in her life was when a newspaper claimed that was what her friends called her.

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        • shadowfire says:

          It’s especially confusing now, since there’s a girl named JoAnna in one of my classes. We’re never quite sure who the teacher’s addressing, because I’m so used to being called Joanna. It was even worse fall term, when the teacher’s name was Joanne too. Gah.

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    • Randomosity 101 (Pi Party Participant) says:

      -85.3 It is a Jewish thing, but it depends where your family’s from. Depending on where they’re from, it’s traditional to name after either a dead relative or a live one, and the converse to te particular tradition is taboo.

      That’s actually how I got my name. I was named after a great-grandmother who died before I was born. As for my middle name, my mother wanted to name me after her grandmother, but she was still alive, so my mother gave me a similar name because she couldn’t really name me after her grandmother. (Said maternal great-grandmother is still alive, by the way. I visit her sometimes when I’m in California. Everyone thinks she looks at least fifteen years younger than she actually is. :) )

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    • I was named after my father, who was named after his two grandfathers. My family believed in recycling names.

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  86. Unintended Pun says:

    My mom told me that my middle name and my sister’s middle name were names that she wanted for our first names. My mom and dad agreed on our first names, and my mom’s original ideas became our middle names.
    I’m glad that my sister and I both have K names, and that they are spelled the German way with our German last name. (We are Karin and Kristin)

    When I go to college I might tell people to pronounce my name the German way. (Car-een, not Care-in) When I’m in Europe this summer maybe I’ll try it out and see if I can get used to it.

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  87. Bibliophile says:

    Susurration.

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  88. Trojan Tiger says:

    False seemed like a odd word a minute ago, then I typed it and thought “Oh, that makes sense,” then I looked at it for another ten seconds and now it seems to be spelled oddly…. Is this just me?

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  89. Armada says:

    In my opinion:

    Gaily: In a lighthearted, happy manner.

    Gayly: In a homosexual manner.

    And the two should not be used interchangeably.

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  90. Insatiably Quaeritating Bibliophile says:

    Furcae! Peribuccal lamellae!

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  91. oobatooba says:

    Weird and awkward are the two best spellings in the English language, because their meaning and spelling are alike.

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  92. Koko's Apprentice says:

    Imperfect tense in Spanish has some really funny words:
    Trabajaba (en used to work)
    Hablaban (they used to talk)

    Also, as I mentioned in a different thread, secchi is really fun to say.

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  93. Bibliophile says:

    For some reason, I always read ‘Chess Eterna-ment Rankings’ as ‘Chess Eterna-ment Ramblings.’ Also, whenever I says ‘blogname,’ I get the urge to say ‘Musername.’ It’s strange.
    I love the name Elenora.

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  94. Armada says:

    כושי (kushi): Such a cute word. It sounds like cereal and freckles and handsome brown people. Why can’t we all just talk in Hebrew while discussing racial issues?

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    • Lizzie says:

      This is two years old, but to answer the rhetorical question, possibly because it’s a pejorative term and also because thinking of groups of people as “cute” is kind of belittling.

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  95. KaiYves says:

    I really like “argosy” lately. I read a piece by George Bass referring to shipwrecks as “these lost argosies”, and he could have just said “wrecks” and meant the same thing, but doesn’t “lost argosies” sound so much cooler and more mysterious?

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  96. KaiYves says:

    Does anyone else find “telephony” an Inherently Funny Word?

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  97. Noah2316 says:

    Pipple!
    ‘To make the murmuring sound of a gentle wind or rippling water’

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  98. Agent Lightning says:

    susurrus
    bewildered
    torpor
    undulate

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