AWADmail Issue 308
                        May 25, 2008

     A Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day
    and Other Interesting Tidbits about Words and Language


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From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
Subject: Interesting stories from the net

Lost Parrot Reunited After Telling Its Name and Address :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7414846.stm

Yours truly was interviewed in this documentary on an anagrammer:
http://www.pbs.org/pov/shorts/shorts_arsmagna.html
Make your own anagrams at http://wordsmith.org/anagram

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From: Rudy Rosenberg Sr (rrosenbergsr accuratechemical.com)
Subject: RE: A.Word.A.Day--cicerone
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/cicerone.html

In French Cicero is written as Ciceron. In France, even though schoolchildren
learn about him, he is most famous for a play on words:
Cicéron c'est Poincaré (phonetically: Si c'est rond c'est point carré).

If it is round, it is not square.

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From: Chips Mackinolty (manbet174 yahoo.com.au)
Subject: cicero

One of this week's words, "Cicero" has a rather more deadly place in history.
A revolt against the Angevin French in Sicily began Easter Monday (March 30,
1282) in Palermo after a French soldier insulted a Sicilian woman. As many
as 8,000 French were massacred: the test to determine whether a suspect was
French or Sicilian was the way in which they pronounced "Cicero". The
(non-Sicilian) pronunciation guide in A.Word.A.Day got people killed!

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From: Derek Thorn (errantnight gmail.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--cicerone

The word has also been co-opted as a sort of parallel term to sommelier
for someone extremely knowledgeable about beer. http://www.cicerone.org/

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From: Mike Contino (contino sbcglobal.net)
Subject: feedback: svengali
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/svengali.html

As every budding young (or old) magician knows, a Svengali deck is one of
the first you learn tricks with.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svengali_deck#Svengali_Deck

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From: Lucinda Masterton (lcmasterton aol.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--lucullan
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/lucullan.html

I was thrilled to see this word. My parents had a small inn in Vermont,
where my sisters and I grew up. It was far from everything, about five miles
from the nearest tiny town on mostly dirt road. My parents did not have
enough money to put in a swimming pool, tennis courts, or a  shuffleboard,
so they advertised in the Saturday Review that there was "Nothing Whatever
to Do", and, the ad always said that they had "Lucullan food". The inn
(Blueberry Hill Farm) was quite well known in its day, particularly for
the food, which was, indeed lucullan, cooked by my mother, who also wrote
several well-respected cookbooks.

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From: Shannon O'Hara <sohara28 gmail.com)
Subject: Lucullan - a happy memory

I just wanted to write to tell you how happy today's word made me. It wasn't
the word, really, it was the fact that I not only knew what it meant, but
knew that you had taught it to me.

As soon as I saw the subject line, I thought "Luxurious!", and I remembered
that this was a word that I had never heard of before I started getting AWAD.
 I've only heard or read it a few times since, but seeing it today I was
delighted that you have undoubtedly improved my vocabulary.

I started wondering when it was that you had featured this word before, so I
checked your archives. It was Jan 20, 1997! I didn't even realize how long
you've been a part of my life.

Thank you so much for bringing knowledge and pleasure into my life almost
every day for over eleven years. If I might make a suggestion, you might
want to annotate your words with the date(s) that they were featured, so
that others can experience the same frisson of recognition I experienced.

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From: Lynn Kauppi (tomereader842 gmail.com)
Subject: feedback: jeremiah
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/jeremiah.html

The vast majority of critical biblical scholars think that Jeremiah did not
write Lamentations. Instead Lamentations was written by an unknown poet
shortly after the destruction of Jerusalem in 570. Jeremiah's own book of
collected prophecies shows that for many people life continued much as it
had before. Lamentations, however, suggests, that at least for the upper
classes (precisely the ones who were deported to Babylon), the destruction
of Jerusalem was an absolutely shattering experience.

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From: Liza Levy (sparkydoc kyk.net)
Subject: email addresses

I noticed, with approval, that you had elected to foil address-stealing bots
by omitting a universal portion of every correspondent's email address.
I wonder if the resultant space might be called a [EMAIL PROTECTED]

............................................................................
A word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged, it is the skin of a
living thought and may vary greatly in color and content according to the
circumstances and the time in which it is used. -Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.,
jurist (1841-1935)

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