Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crapulous
feeling ill as a result of too much eating/drinking.
Which makes one corpulent. (Fat, but in a fancy way, like an old obese king).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a deficit of interesting vocabulary in the USA due to the terrible education system. Words like "fortnight" are used throughout the English speaking world.
I was watching an idiotic British show with my mom (I think it was Absolutely Fabulous) and she pointed out how even in these lowbrow shows the vocabulary is richer than American vocabulary. For example, the two women went on a stroll, not a walk.
You are kicked off this thread for thinking AbFab is idiotic and lowbrow, and for thinking stroll is a "rich" term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a deficit of interesting vocabulary in the USA due to the terrible education system. Words like "fortnight" are used throughout the English speaking world.
I was watching an idiotic British show with my mom (I think it was Absolutely Fabulous) and she pointed out how even in these lowbrow shows the vocabulary is richer than American vocabulary. For example, the two women went on a stroll, not a walk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a deficit of interesting vocabulary in the USA due to the terrible education system. Words like "fortnight" are used throughout the English speaking world.
What? Words fall in/out of use all the time. Just because some English speaking countries use different words than others doesn't mean there's any kind of "deficit". It's not like we don't know what "fortnight" means.
There are also some fabulous American words not heavily used outside the US - like, jalopy, varmint and chancy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: cattywampus
yonder
I use this and kitty corner a lot for some reason
Anonymous wrote:There's a deficit of interesting vocabulary in the USA due to the terrible education system. Words like "fortnight" are used throughout the English speaking world.
Anonymous wrote: cattywampus
yonder
Anonymous wrote:Rod, as a unit of distance. 1 rod = 5.5 yards.
Hoyden = an energetic, lively girl
Riprap = stones spread or piled along a shoreline to prevent erosion
I was so annoyed to find that the NYT Spelling Bee game doesn’t accept hoyden or riprap.
Anonymous wrote:I like all the mongers (ex. fishmonger.)
I know we hear fearmonger occasionally but returning the word to commerce would be fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crapulous
feeling ill as a result of too much eating/drinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:alight
Isn't "alright" just the informal version of "all right", not a previous, older version? Like anywayS vs anyway.
Sigh
Anonymous wrote:How about we state our weight in stones instead of pounds?
And instead of "going forward" we say "henceforth"? It also sounds much more committed to whatever one says they are going to start doing.
Anonymous wrote:How about we state our weight in stones instead of pounds?
And instead of "going forward" we say "henceforth"? It also sounds much more committed to whatever one says they are going to start doing.
Anonymous wrote:There's a deficit of interesting vocabulary in the USA due to the terrible education system. Words like "fortnight" are used throughout the English speaking world.