Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Scheduled Classes for Computers

10:10 am - 11:05 am Reserved--Ms. Zmroczek
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Lou Zmroczek COM121 (20) Using ProQuest presented by Ms. Kim Stahler.

11:15 am - 12:15 pm Reserved--Ms. Zmroczek
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Lou Zmroczek COM121 (20) Using ProQuest presented by Ms. Kim Stahler.

2:30 pm - 3:50 pm Reserved—Ms. Funk
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Amanda Funk COM121(14) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.Brenna Corbit.

Word of the Day

opprobrious
\uh-PROH-bree-uh s\

adjective
1. outrageously disgraceful or shameful: opprobrious conduct.
2. conveying or expressing opprobrium, as language or a speaker: opprobrious invectives.

Quotes
"The boy is of an outspoken disposition, and had made an opprobrious remark respecting my personal appearance" "What did he say about your appearance?" "I have forgotten, sir," said Jeeves, with a touch of austerity. "But it was opprobrious…"
-- P. G. Wodehouse, The Inimitable Jeeves, 1923

Origin
Opprobrious can be traced to the Latin opprobrāre meaning "to reproach; taunt." It entered English in the mid-1300s.

Dictionary.com

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Library Humor





Daily Writing Tips - Apostrophe Placement in Proper Names

Apostrophe Placement in Proper Names
by Mark Nichol

What do the brand names Bakers Choice, the Diners Club, and Mrs. Fields Cookies have in common? Besides prompting hunger, they’re all “supposed” to have apostrophes in their names.

So, why don’t they? A choice that belongs to bakers is a bakers’ choice, a club that belongs to diners is a diners’ club, and cookies that belong to Mrs. Fields are Mrs. Fields’s (or, depending on which style tradition you adhere to, Mrs. Fields’) cookies. The name for the Diners Club gets a pass because it can also be argued that it refers to a club for diners, and thus is attributive (for the same reason that, for example, the name of the California Teachers Association lacks an apostrophe — it serves, rather than is a possession of, teachers).

But the baking-products company and the cookie maker, like Barclays Bank and many other businesses, evidently decided that apostrophes are confusing or distracting and opted to omit them. Similarly, the Hells Angels opted for a streamlined look at the expense of proper style, and I don’t know about you, but I’m not about to walk into the local chapter headquarters and start complaining about the motorcycle club’s error. (You go ahead — I’ll wait for you here.)

The Levi’s brand name for jeans and other apparel is problematic; technically, something that belongs to the company would be referred to as Levi’s’s, but we’ll yield to practicality and pretend that the owner is Mr. Strauss, and anything of his is Levi’s. And though I prefer that the possessive case be signaled with an apostrophe and an s, not the symbol alone, though “Thomas’s” would look better, I’ll cut Thomas’ English Muffins some slack.

But the one company name that is indefensibly wrong is Lands’ End; this labels clumsily conjures multiple capes or points converging on one geographical coordinate. The misplaced apostrophe is reportedly the result of an early typographical error deemed too costly to correct; on such small but momentous decisions is derision based.

Regardless of which possessive style you or your employer prefers, when it comes to proper names, writers and editors must bow to the usage of a name’s owners — and in order to guarantee that the usage you use is correct, verify company, organization, and brand names on the website of the business or group itself.
*http://www.dailywritingtips.com/apostrophe-placement-in-proper-names/

Scheduled Classes for Computers

9:30 am - 10:30 am Reserved—Mr. Reimenschneider
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Mr. Jerry Reimenschneider COM121 (17) Finding and evaluating Internet sources presented by Ms. Kim Stahler.

12:30 pm - 2 pm Reserved—Ms. Corbett
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Jodi Corbett COM152 Speech (15) NO INSTRUCTION, reserve 12 computers.

Word of the Day

argy-bargy
\AHR-gee-BAHR-gee\
noun

1. Chiefly British. a vigorous discussion or dispute.

Quotes
The current argy-bargy over herring fishing seems to bring the whole issue of conservation, national fishing limits, and policing of the seas into perspective.
-- Brian Gardner, "Don't send a gunboat," New Scientist, July 21, 1977

Origin
Argy-bargy is a derivative of argle-bargle, the first element of which is a variant of word argue. The term was originally used in Scottish in the late 1500s.

Dictionary.com

Monday, September 28, 2015

Word of the Day

cuittle
 \ KY-tl \  , verb;  
1.to wheedle, cajole, or coax.

Quotes:
The Papist threatened us with purgatory, and fleeched us with pardons; — the Protestant mints at us with the sword, and cuittles  us with the liberty of conscience…
-- Sir Walter Scott, "The Abbot" , 1820

Baith Easie and Maister Strong cuittled  him up wi' the idea that the lassie had ta'en a notion o' him, and that they expected a waddin' afore lang.
-- Christina Fraser, "Glints O' Glengonnar" , 1910

Origin:
Cuittle  is of uncertain origin.

Dictionary.com

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Tattoo Lit
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?
 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.
You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

The final words of Ferd of The Duchess of Melfi on Act V, Scene V.

“Whether we fall by ambition, blood, or lust
like diamonds, we are cut with our own dust”


*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos

Scheduled Classes for Computers

9 am - 10 am Reserved--Ms. DeLong
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Dina DeLong Com121 (19) Using ProQuest presented by Ms. Brenna Corbit.


11:15 am - 12:10 pm Reserved--Ms. Dina DeLong
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Dina DeLong COM121 (19) Using ProQuest presented by Ms. Brenna Corbit.

4 pm - 5 pm Reserved—Mr. Walentis
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Mr. Al Walentis COM121 (20) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.
Patricia Nouhra.

6 pm - 7:15 pm Reserved—Dr. Diken
Where: Y116 ***NOTE IN CLASSROOM!
Description: Dr. Bahar Diken COM121 (18) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.
Kim Stahler.


7:30 pm - 8:30 pm Reserved—Ms. Kwitkowski
Where: B602 ***Note location!
Description: Ms. Teresa Kwitkowski COM121 (20) Using ProQuest databases presented by
Ms. Marcina Wagner.

Daily Writing Tips - 10 Tips About Basic Writing Competency

10 Tips About Basic Writing Competency
by Mark Nichol

*Here are ten areas to be sure to attend to if you wish to be taken seriously as a professional writer.

Formatting
1. Do not enter two letter spaces between sentences. Use of two spaces is an obsolete convention based on typewriter technology and will mark you as out of touch. If editors or other potential employers or clients notice that you don’t know this simple fact, they may be skeptical about your writing skills before you’ve had a chance to impress them.
2. Take care that paragraphs are of varying reasonable lengths. Unusually short or long paragraphs are appropriate in moderation, but allowing a series of choppy paragraphs or laboriously long ones to remain in a final draft is unprofessional.
3. If you’re submitting a manuscript or other content for publication, do not format it with various fonts and other style features. Editors want to read good writing, not enjoy aesthetically pleasing (or not) manuscripts; efforts to prettify a file are a distraction.

Style
4. Do not, in résumés or in other text, get carried away with capitalization. You didn’t earn a Master’s Degree; you earned a master’s degree. You didn’t study Biology; you studied biology. You weren’t Project Manager; you were project manager. (Search the Daily Writing Tips website for “capitalization” to find numerous articles on the subject.)
5. Become familiar with the rules for styling numbers, and apply them rationally.
6. Know the principles of punctuation, especially regarding consistency in insertion or omission of the serial comma, avoidance of the comma splice, and use of the semicolon. (Search the Daily Writing Tips website for “punctuation” to find numerous articles on the subject.) And if you write in American English and you routinely place a period after the closing quotation mark at the end of a sentence rather than before it, go back to square one and try again.
7. Hyphenation is complicated. In other breaking news, life isn’t fair. Don’t count on editors to cure your hyphenation hiccups for you; become your own expert consultant. (In addition to reading the post I linked to here, search the Daily Writing Tips website for “hyphenation” to find numerous articles on the subject.)
8. Avoid “scare quotes.” A term does not need to be called out by quotation marks around it unless you must clarify that the unusual usage is not intended to be read literally, or when they are employed for “comic” effect. (In this case, the implication is that the comic effect is patently unamusing.)

Usage
9. For all intensive purposes, know your idioms. (That should be “for all intents and purposes,” but you should also just omit such superfluous phrases.) On a related note, avoid clichés like the plague — except when you don’t. They’re useful, but generous use is the sign of a lazy writer.
Spelling
10. Don’t rely on spellchecking programs to do your spelling work for you, and always verify spelling (and wording) of proper nouns.

*http://www.dailywritingtips.com/10-tips-about-basic-writing-competency/

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Word of the Day

wanderlust
 \ WON-der-luhst \  , noun;  
1.a strong, innate desire to rove or travel about.

Quotes:
In the first few seconds an aching sadness wrenched his heart, but it soon gave way to a feeling of sweet disquiet, the excitement of gypsy wanderlust .
-- Mikhail Bulgakov, translated by Diana Burgin and Katherine Tiernan O'Connor, The Master and Margarita , 1967

A person susceptible to " wanderlust " is not so much addicted to movement as committed to transformation.
-- Forward by Pico Iyer, "Why We Travel," Wanderlust , 2000

Origin:
Wanderlust  is a German loanword that translates literally to "wander desire." It entered English in the early 1900s.

Dictionary.com

Word of the Day

cathexis
\kuh-THEK-sis\,
noun:

1. Psychoanalysis. the investment of emotional significance in an activity, object, or idea.
2. Psychoanalysis. the charge of psychic energy so invested.

She remembered so clearly the surprise of that first cathexis with Earth across the light-years…
-- Ian Watson, "Very Slow Time Machine," 1979

Now our primary libidinal cathexis is with machines. Cars, power tools, computers, Kitchen Aids, audiophile equipment.
-- Curtis White, "Requiem," 2001

Cathexis ultimately comes from the Proto-Indo-European root segh- meaning "to hold." It entered English in the 1920s.

Dictionary.com

Library Humor


Fun Time


Saturday, September 26, 2015

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?
 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.
You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

Keep calm with the Braille word for “still.”

*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos

Library Humor


Word of the Day

tenuity
\tuh-NOO-i-tee, -NYOO-, te-\,
adjective:

1. thinness of consistency; rarefied condition.
2. the state of being tenuous.
3. slenderness.

The exceeding tenuity of the object of our dread was apparent; for all heavenly objects were plainly visible through it.
-- Edgar Allan Poe, "The Conversation of Eiros and Charmion," 1839

There was no doubt left to me; the atmosphere of the moon was either pure oxygen or air, and capable therefore—unless its tenuity was excessive—of supporting our alien life.
-- H.G. Wells, "The First Men in the Moon," 1901

Tenuity is derived from the Latin word tenuitās meaning "thinness."

Dictionary.com

Friday, September 25, 2015

Doesn't Everyone?


Word of the Day

Yarborough
 \YAHR-bur-oh, -buhr-oh or, esp. British, -ber-uh\,
noun:
Whist, Bridge. a hand in which no card is higher than a nine.

"Who kills over a bridge hand? Anyway, I had a total Yarborough—look at my hand and look at her hand!"
-- Matthew Granovetter, "I Shot My Bridge Partner," 1999

"When the time comes, I shall take a white handerchief out of my coat pocket. That will mean that you are about to be dealt a Yarborough…"
-- Ian Fleming, "Moonraker," 1955

Yarborough came to English in the late 1800s after the 2nd Earl of Yarborough, who was said to have bet 1000 to 1 against the occurrence of a card hand in which no card is higher than a nine.

Dictionary.com

Library Pun Humor


Thursday, September 24, 2015

Daily Writing Tips - 35 Synonyms for “Look”

35 Synonyms for “Look”
by Mark Nichol

*Look, it’s perfectly acceptable to use the verb look, but don’t hesitate to replace this fairly ordinary-looking word with one of its many more photogenic synonyms. Many of these substitutions come in especially handy when it comes to finding one word to take the place of look-plus-adverb or look-plus-adjective-and-noun, as the definitions demonstrate.

1. Blink: to look at with disbelief, dismay, or surprise or in a cursory manner
2. Browse: to look at casually
3. Consider: to look at reflectively or steadily
4. Contemplate: to look at extensively and/or intensely
5. Dip (into): to examine or read superficially
6. Eye: to look at closely or steadily
7. Fixate (on): to look at intensely
8. Gape: to look at with surprise or wonder, or mindlessly, and with one’s mouth open
9. Gawk: see gape
10. Gawp: see gape (generally limited to British English)
11. Gaze: to look steadily, as with admiration, eagerness, or wonder
12. Glare: to look angrily
13. Glimpse: to look briefly
14. Gloat: to look at with triumphant and/or malicious satisfaction
15. Glower: to look at with annoyance or anger
16. Goggle: to look at with wide eyes, as if in surprise or wonder
17. Leer: to look furtively to one side, or to look at lecherously or maliciously
18. Observe: to look carefully to obtain information or come to a conclusion, or to notice or to inspect
19. Ogle: to look at with desire or greed
20. Outface: to look steadily at another to defy or dominate, or to do so figuratively
21. Outstare: see outface
22. Peek: to look briefly or furtively, or through a small or narrow opening
23. Peep: to look cautiously or secretively; see also peek (also, slang for “see” or “watch”)
24. Peer: to look at with curiosity or intensity, or to look at something difficult to see
25. Peruse: to look at cursorily, or to do so carefully
26. Pore (over): to look at intently
27. Regard: to look at attentively or to evaluate
28. Rubberneck: to look at in curiosity
29. Scan: to look at quickly, or to look through text or a set of images or objects to find a specific one
30. Skim: see scan
31. Stare: to look at intently
32. Stare (down): to look at someone else to try to dominate
33. Study: to look at attentively or with attention to detail
34. Watch: to look carefully or in expectation
35. Wink: to look at while blinking one eye to signal or tease another person
http://www.dailywritingtips.com/35-synonyms-for-look/

Scheduled Classes for Computers - Thursday, September 24, 2015

11 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Reserved—Dr. Diken
Where: Y116 ***NOTE IN CLASSROOM!
Description: Dr. Bahar Diken COM121 (20) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.Mary Ellen Heckman.

12:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. Reserved—Dr. Diken
Where: Y116 ***NOTE IN CLASSROOM!
Description: Dr. Bahar Diken COM121 (20) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.
Kim Stahler.

2 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. Reserved—Dr. Diken
Where: Y116 ***NOTE IN CLASSROOM!
Description: Dr. Bahar Diken COM121 (20) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.
Kim Stahler.

3:30 p.m. 4:45 p.m.
Where: Y116 ***NOTE IN CLASSROOM!
Description: Dr. Bahar Diken COM121 (20) Using ProQuest databases presented by Ms.Kim Stahler.

6 p.m.- 7:20 p.m. Reserved--Mr. Walentis
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Mr. Al Walentis COM121 (20) Reserve 12 computers without staff instruction.

Word of the Day

anfractuous
 \an-FRAK-choo-uhs\,
adjective:
characterized by windings and turnings; sinuous; circuitous: an anfractuous path.

Down high anfractuous rocks flowed the odor of rotten eggs from nests deserted by the hawks.
-- Jean Giono, "The Horseman on the Roof," 1982

At the foot of this anfractuous path which leads to the summit of Sam's Island lies the incredible Black Bay.
-- Ishmael Reed, "The Free-Lance Pallbearers," 1967

Anfractuous is a back formation of the word anfractuosity meaning "a winding bend."

Dictionary.com

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Word of the Day

hippophile

 \ HIP-uh-fahyl, -fil \  , noun;  
1.one who loves horses.
Definition of hippophile| See synonyms| Comment on today's word| Suggest tomorrow's word

Quotes:
Hippophiles  could be temperamental. Monsieur Poitevin had noticed this. Horses themselves were stubborn and impulsive and, over time, an exchange of character could occur between rider and mount.
-- Julia O'Faolain, "The Judas Cloth," 1992

Some say a certain hippophile  Earl must be at least half in love with Mrs D—r, to play his part so well at the R-ch—d House Theatre.
-- Emma Donoghue, "Life Mask," 2004

Origin:
Hippophile  comes from the Greek híppos  meaning "horse" and -philos  meaning "dear" or "beloved." This term entered English in the mid-1800s.

Library Humor


Scheduled Classes for Computers - Wednesday, September 23, 2015

9:05 a.m. - 10:10 a.m. Reserved—Ms. Bradley
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Auria Bradley ORI102 (30) Intro to Library PP presented by Ms. Kim Stahler.

Good Morning


Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Mic
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?
 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.
You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.


Stay inspired to be true to your memoir with this open book.


*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos




Scheduled Classes for Computers - Tuesday, September 22, 2015

6 p.m. - 7:20 p.m. Reserved--Mr. Walentis
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Mr. Al Walentis COM121 (20) Reserve the 12 computers without staff instruction.

7:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Reserved— Ms. March
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Nancy March COM051 (19) Finding and evaluating Internet sources presented by Ms. Mary Ellen Heckman.

Word of the Day

analphabetic
 \ an-al-fuh-BET-ik, an-al- \  , adjective;  
1.not alphabetic: an analphabetic arrangement of letters .
2.unable to read or write; illiterate: analphabetic peoples .
3.Phonetics . of or constituting a system of phonetic transcription, as the one devised by Otto Jespersen, that for each sound indicates by separate sets of symbols the articulator, the point of articulation, and the size and shape of the mouth opening.
noun:
1.an illiterate person; analphabet.

Quotes:
In your atrophied eyes, the letters read like a line of alien hieroglyphs. Bizarre analphabetic  randomness. English has no such series.
-- Richard Powers, "Plowing the Dark" , 2000

One of the stout Polish cleaners, friendly, mute, and virtually analphabetic  in English, is emptying the trash can behind the bench.
-- Scott Turow, "The Laws of our Fathers" , 1996

Origin:
Analphabetic  comes from the Greek word analphábēt(os)  which meant "not knowing the alphabet." The concept of an alphabet has existed since at least 1500 BCE.

Dictionary.com

Monday, September 21, 2015

Library Humor


Word of the Day

spumescent
 \ spyoo-MES-uhnt \  , adjective;  
1.foamy; foamlike; frothy.

Quotes:
Within the mud and rock enclave, a waterfall, clear and spumescent , cascades forcefully down one side.
-- Susan Mann, "One Tongue Singing" , 2004

The usually gentle waterfall, clearly visible in the moonlight and icily shimmering, had been transformed into a phenomenal spumescent  cascade that was magnificent yet uncanny in its magnitude.
-- Barbara Taylor Bradford, "A Woman of Substance" , 1979

Origin:
Spumescent  entered English in the mid-1800s. It came from the Latin word spūma  which meant "foam" along with suffix -escent  which is added to adjectives borrowed from Latin.

Dictionary.com

Scheduled Classes for Computers - Monday September 21, 2015

1:25 p.m. - 2:20 p.m. Reserved--Ms. Bean-Ritter
Where: Yocum Instruction Area
Description: Ms. Carol Bean-Ritter ORI103 (30) Intro. to Library presented by Ms. Kim Stahler.

Daily Writing Tips - 10 Colloquial Terms and Their Meanings

10 Colloquial Terms and Their Meanings
by Mark Nichol

Why is there a taint surrounding ain’t? Why do editors get ornery or riled, or have conniptions or raise a ruckus, if writers try to use these and other words?
The ebb and flow of the English language’s vocabulary is caused by competing crosscurrents. Neologisms come in with each tide, some of them washing ashore and others drifting back out to sea.

But pronouncements from self-appointed experts and tacit disapproval by the self-selected better classes can also result in the relegation of certain terms and idioms to the realm of substandard or nonstandard usage. Here are ten words that, at least in terms of one sense, have been demoted by an association with rural dialect.

1. Ain’t: Once a fully legitimate contraction of “am not” employed at least in familiar conversation by speakers of all social classes, ain’t came to be identified with less well-educated people, and in the United States specifically with poor rural dwellers. It’s unfortunate that in writing, its use is restricted to humorous emphasis or idiomatic expressions (“Say it ain’t so!”).

2. Allow: The sense of allow meaning “concede” or “recognize” has been relegated to obscurity; seldom is this usage employed except in faux-rural contexts.

3. Conniption: This word for an emotional fit, usually appearing in plural form (“having conniptions”), is still employed occasionally in a jocular sense. It was first attested almost two hundred years ago, but its origin is obscure, though it’s possibly a corruption of corruption, which once had a connotation of anger, or might be derived from a dialectal form of captious (“fallacious”).

4. Fetch: Fetch has a colloquial air about it, and it’s unfortunate that the word lacks respectability, because it is more vivid and thorough a term than get (“Could you fetch that for me?”), and more compact than, for example, “Could you go over there and bring that back for me?” It survives in one formal sense, however: far-fetched (originally, “brought from afar,” but used figuratively for most of its centuries-long life span).

5. Ornery: This contraction of ordinary, influenced by the latter word’s less common senses of “coarse” and “ugly,” developed a connotation of cantankerous or mean behavior. Today, it’s used only in a humorous or scornful sense.
6. Reckon: The sense of reckon that means “suppose” (“I reckon I ought to get home”) is one of the most high-profile examples of stereotypical rural dialect, but it’s absent from formal usage.

7. Rile: This dialectal variant of roil, in the sense of “stir up,” is used informally to describe irritation or anger.

8. Ruckus: Ruckus, probably a mash-up of ruction (“disturbance”) and rumpus (“boisterous activity”) — themselves both dialectal terms — is now used only light-heartedly.

9. Spell: The sense of spell that means “an indefinite period of time,” related to the use of the word to mean “substitute,” is confined to rural dialect or affectation of such usage.

10. Yonder: This formerly standard term meaning “over there” is now known only in rural dialect (or spoofing of it) or in a poetic sense.

http://www.dailywritingtips.com/10-colloquial-terms-and-their-meanings/

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Scene Core
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?
 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.
You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

“I am Joe’s smirking revenge,” from the narrator of Fight Club.


*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/

Word of the Day

scintillate
 \ SIN-tl-eyt \  , verb;  
1.to twinkle, as the stars.
2.to sparkle; flash: a mind that scintillates with brilliance .
3.to emit sparks.
4.Electronics . (of a spot of light or image on a radar display) to shift rapidly around a mean position.
5.Physics . a. (of the amplitude, phase, or polarization of an electromagnetic wave) to fluctuate in a random manner. b. (of an energetic photon or particle) to produce a flash of light in a phosphor by striking it.

Quotes:
My wit is all of the p.m. variety, and never scintillates  in the morning.
-- Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler, "A Double Thread" , 1899

Aldebaran was a spot of blood-red fire, and Sirius condensed to one point the light of a world of sapphires. And they shone steadily: they did not scintillate , they were calmly glorious.
-- H.G. Wells, "Under the Knife" , 1896

Origin:
Scintillate  is related to the Latin scintillāre  meaning "to send out sparks, flash." It entered English in the early 1600s.

Dictionary.com

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Library Pun Humor


Grammar


Word of the Day

razz \raz\,
verb:
1. Slang. to deride; make fun of; tease.
noun:
1. raspberry; any sign or expression of dislike or derision.

They razz each other over every play, throw stuff across the room, and laugh deep belly laughs over cutting remarks.
-- Elsa Kok Colopy, "99 Ways to Fight Worry and Stress," 2009

He wouldn't have razzed just me. He would have razzed my Abstract Expressionist pals, too, Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko and Terry Kitchen and so on …
-- Kurt Vonnegut, "Bluebeard: A Novel," 1987

Razz is a shortened variant of raspberry, a colloquialism for a rude sound used to express mockery or contempt. It entered English in the early to mid-1900s.

Dictionary.com

Friday, September 18, 2015

Library Humor


Daily Writing Tips

Gurus and other Teachers
by Maeve Maddox

A reader expressed her disappointment when I left guru off my list of English words that end in u. I’ll endeavor to make up for the omission with this post about guru and other terms for teachers.

1. teacher
I’ll begin with the generic word teacher, an Old English word related to token. A token is something that serves to indicate a fact. “To teach” is to show in the sense of “to guide, to show the way.” To teach something is to convey knowledge or give instruction.

2. tutor
The Latin noun tutor derived from a Latin verb meaning “to watch or guard.” A tutor was a protector. In Roman law, a tutor was the guardian of a legally incapable person. The English word has been used in the sense of “custodian of property,” but its most familiar use is as “a person in charge of looking after or instructing a young person.” In modern American usage, a tutor is a paid or unpaid teacher who provides one-on-one instruction. Tutor is also used as a verb.

3. mentor
The word mentor is an eponym, a word derived from the name of a person. When Odysseus left for the Trojan War, he placed his son Telemachus in the care of a wise old friend named Mentor; the goddess Athena, disguised as Mentor, guides and counsels Telemachus. A mentor, therefore, is a person who guides and advises another–usually younger–person. In American usage, the word is often used to refer to an experienced person in a company who trains and counsels new employees. College students are assigned mentors to help them settle into academic life. Mentor is also used as a verb.

4. sage
A sage is a person of profound wisdom. The word derives from a Latin verb meaning “to be wise”; the verb’s present participle, sapiens, means wise. The noun sage is not much used in modern English, but the adjective sage is often seen, especially in the cliché “to offer sage advice.”

5. maestro
English has its own version of this word: master. A master or maestro is one who has achieved eminence in a skill or a profession. Taken from the Italian, maestro [MY-stro] usually refers to an eminent musician.
Note: Several words borrowed by English to denote a wise person–including guru– derive from Sanskrit.

6. pundit
This word for “a person who makes authoritative comments or judgments” is from a Sanskrit word meaning learned or skilled. In modern India, the word survives as pandit: “a learned person; a Hindu priest or teacher.” In modern American speech, the word pundit is usually applied to people who comment on current affairs or specialized fields.

7. guru
Originally an adjective meaning “weighty, grave, dignified,” Sanskrit guru came to mean a Hindu spiritual teacher or head of a religious sect. In modern American usage, the word is used loosely to refer to just about anyone who knows a lot about some subject.

8. swami
The Hindu word swami translates as “master, lord, prince” and is used by Hindus as a term of respectful address. Swami can also refer to a Hindu temple, idol, or religious teacher.

9. sadhu
If you’ve read Kim by Rudyard Kipling, you’ve seen this word spelled saddhu. A sadhu is an Indian holy man or saint. The word comes from a Sanskrit adjective meaning “effective, correct, good.”

10. rishi
A rishi is a holy seer, specifically one of the holy poets or sages credited with the composition of the Veda writings.

11. maharishi
A maharishi is a “great rishi,” a Hindu sage or holy man. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi achieved worldwide fame as guru to the Beatles.

http://www.dailywritingtips.com/gurus-and-other-teachers/

Word of the Day

laconic
\luh-KON-ik\

adjective
1. using few words; expressing much in few words; concise: a laconic reply.

Quotes
Veni, vidi, vici: I came, I saw, I conquered… They were the three laconic words Caesar used to describe what happened when he finally met King Pharnaces of Pontus.
-- Margaret George, The Memoirs of Cleopatra, 1997

Origin
Laconic is derived from Laconia, Greece. The people of this region, which held Sparta as its capital, were said to be brief and concise in speech and writing. Laconic entered English in the late 1500s.

Dictionary.com

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Tattoo Lit
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?
 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.
You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

Jack Merridew’s creeptastic mask from Lord of the Flies.

“Beside the mere, his sinewy body held up a mask that drew their eyes and appalled them. He began to dance and his laughter became a bloodthirsty snarling. He capered towards Bill, and the mask was a thing on its own, behind which Jack hid, liberated from shame and self-consciousness.”

*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/

Word of the Day - Algid

Photo: writerscircle.com
algid \AL-jid\,
adjective:
Cold; chilly.

The sun weakens and grows pale as though seen through algid water and the air is stale and still.
-- Bryce Courtenay, "The Family Frying Pan"

There was an algid texture to the air, causing everyone to shiver involuntarily.
-- Richard K. Patterson, "The Kaleidoscope Project"

A late Renaissance term, algid is derived from the Latin algidus, meaning "cold."

Dictionary.com Word of the Day

Buttonwood Street Bridge

Buttonwood Street closed completely on Tuesday, July 21!

 Notice to Proceed with work on the Buttonwood Street Bridge was issued to Contractor J.D. Eckman, Inc.

 With the installation of the traffic signal at Front and Walnut Streets the bridge will be closed completely and detour implemented on Tuesday, July 21, 2015.

http://www.readingbridges.net/

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Library Humor


Word of the Day - Topos

Photo: writerscircle.com
topos \TOH-pohs, -pos\,
noun:
a convention or motif, especially in a literary work; a rhetorical convention.

Each topos carries an implied meaning that is more significant than a precisely observed place could provide
-- Stephen Siddall, "Landscape and Literature," 2009

How could the most universally legitimate political ideology of our time fail to become a topos in postwar fiction?
-- Homi K. Bhabha, "Nation and Narration," 1990

Topos entered English in the 1930s directly from the Greek word meaning "place." It has always referred to a literary motif.

Dictionary.com Word of the Day

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

More About Female Author - George Eliot

George Eliot

Mary Ann Evans, who published under the pen name by which she is still widely known, George Eliot, was one of the greatest novelists of the Victorian era. Prior to writing such canonical works as Middlemarch and The Mill on the Floss, Eliot worked as a professional writer and edited The Westminster Review -- a very unusual role for a woman at the time.

Though not an outspoken feminist, she was willing to buck social norms. Her longest relationship, with the married writer George Henry Lewes, scandalized society; he was unable to obtain a divorce from his wife, so they chose to live together out of wedlock.

Their arrangement lasted from 1854 until his death in 1878, and despite being an intellectual himself, he was very supportive of Eliot’s writing and aided her in her work. She wrote all of her seven acclaimed novels during their 24 years of cohabitation.

*http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/07/02/beach-reads-summer_n_7699708.html?ir=Women&ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000046

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Literary Tattoos
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?
 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.
You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.


The often deliciously passive aggressive notation is short for the Latin “sic erat scriptum” (“thus was it written”).

*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/

Word of the Day - Pilcrow

 \PIL-kroh\,
noun:
a paragraph mark.

Take the trouble to look it up and in most cases the humble pilcrow warrants only a few lines, dismissed briskly as a "paragraph mark" that is "only important when brevity is important."
-- Keith Houston, "Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation, Symbols, and Other Typographical Marks," 2013

I'm more like a specialized piece of punctuation, a cedilla, umlaut or pilcrow, hard to track down on the keyboard of a computer or typewriter.
-- Adam Mars-Jones, "Pilcrow," 2008

Pilcrow arose in the 1400s, possibly from the Old French paragrafe meaning "paragraph."


Dictionary.com

Monday, September 14, 2015

The Writer's Circle,

*5 Surprising Films That You Didn’t Know Were Based On Shakespeare Plays

There’s a reason why it’s so easy to update Shakespeare. In Shakespeare’s own time, actors often did not dress in the time period of the play. This costuming convention lends itself well to modern revivals. After all, it’s the words that are important to the story, not the clothes!

Many films have tackled Shakespeare’s work and transported it into a world far away from Shakespeare’s 16th century London. With each adaptation made, the legacy of Shakespeare grows and takes on new meaning, endearing new audiences to his wonderful plays. We’ve come across a ton of adaptions but these are the ones that best remind us that Shakespeare truly is all around us!

1. RAN (1985)

King Lear

The title translates to several things, but chief among them is “chaos.” Akira Kurosawa has directed several adaptations of Shakespeare’s plays (e.g. Throne Of Blood) but Ran takes King Lear to an extreme. Its budget of $12 million made it the most expensive Japanese film made at that time. And, to execute this film, Kurosawa hired almost 1,400 extras and 200 horses to enact the large battles that take place throughout. Taking its plot from King Lear, a powerful warlord divides his kingdom among his three sons. Watch as chaos ensues, or should we say “as ran ensues.”

2. FORBIDDEN PLANET (1956)

The Tempest

A scientist, alone on a strange planet with only his daughter, is met by a group of travelers. Sounds a lot like The Tempest, right? Forbidden Planet paved the way for the many sci-fi films that came after it with its intriguing electronic score and head-on shot of the film’s starship, the Cruiser C-57D. It even stars a young Leslie Nielsen and “Robby the Robot,” (Caliban’s equivalent) who appeared in several movies after Forbidden Planet and has become a cultural reference point for science-fiction films.

Shakespeare-Pt1
Robby The Robot / via Instagram.com/la2law

3. 10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU (1999)

The Taming Of The Shrew

Heath Ledger, Julia Stiles, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in one movie? Oh my! The Taming Of The Shrew meets the cliques of high school in this iconic “teen movie.” Katherina and Petruchio become Kat and Patrick, as Cameron, the shy, new kid in town, comes up with a plan to land a date with Kat’s popular sister, Bianca, who isn’t allowed to date until Kat does. This charming and hilariously dated movie still holds up to this day and is a great re-imagining of its source material.

4. DELIVER US FROM EVA (2003)

The Taming Of The Shrew

Here it is, the connection between Heath Ledger and LL Cool J. Both men played the Petruchio character in different versions of The Taming Of The Shrew. In Gary Hardwick’s Deliver Us From Eva, LL Cool J’s character, Ray, is hired by the husbands of Eva’s sisters to court Eva (Gabrielle Union) and get her to stop meddling in their lives. Ray takes on the challenge but things spiral out of control with a kidnapping scheme. But we won’t reveal any more. You’ll just have to see this hilarious adaptation for yourself!

A tree shrew. But is it tame?

5. SCOTLAND, PA. (2001)

Macbeth

The title is taken from the movie’s setting in 1970’s Pennsylvania, while the plot is taken from Shakespeare’s Macbeth. But instead of usurping the king, Joe and Pat McBeth dethrone the owner of the fast-food restaurant they work at and turn it into the world’s first “drive-tru.” With awesome performances by James Le Gros, Maura Tierny, and Christopher Walken (plus a cameo by Andy Dick!), the movie holds fast to the play’s devious and psychological plot. You won’t want to miss this one, it’s deliciously good!

*http://writerscircle.com/what-do-heath-ledger-and-ll-cool-j-have-in-common-shakespearean-adaptations-part-1/?utm_source=twc-twcfan&utm_medium=social-fb&utm_term=081815&utm_content=link&utm_campaign=what-do-heath-ledger-and-ll-cool-j-have-in-common-shakespearean-adaptations-part-1&origin=

What is your favorite adaptation of Shakespeare?

Interlibrary Loans Originated by The Yocum Library

An interlibrary loan (ILL) is a request for a cataloged item that is owned by a library outside of The Yocum Library or the Advanced Library Information Network (ALIN) of Berks County. A request for a cataloged item that is available through the ALIN network is an intralibrary loan request and is processed using the ALIN “Hold” procedure although a request for a periodical article that is available within the ALIN network is considered an interlibrary loan..

The Yocum Library's mission provides the foundation for its provision of interlibrary loan services. Due to the high costs involved in the interlibrary loan process, this service is provided only to members of the RACC community – RACC students, staff, faculty, trustees, and alumni. Other library patrons should be referred to their public, college, or corporate libraries to obtain interlibrary loan services.

Members of the RACC community who are eligible for interlibrary loan services must have current library cards and no blocks, fines, charges, or overdue items on their library accounts. A library patron, who does not pick up an interlibrary loan item after notification of its receipt by The Yocum Library, will have a message placed on his/her library account; three or more such messages will block the patron from making more interlibrary loan requests from The Yocum Library. The Yocum Library reserves the right to deny interlibrary loan services to anyone who has not complied with the interlibrary loan guidelines and procedures in the past.

Because of the delay involved in obtaining interlibrary loan materials, an interlibrary loan request should be the product of a session with a librarian, so that the patron is first provided with as much information as possible from The Yocum Library=s resources.

The Yocum Library reserves the right to refuse a request which violates local, state, or federal laws, such as, but not limited to, copyright violations.

http://www.racc.edu/Yocum/policy_ill.aspx


Word of the Day - Sumptuous

sumptuous
\SUHMP-choo-uhs\

adjective
1. entailing great expense, as from choice materials, fine work, etc.; costly: a sumptuous residence.
2. luxuriously fine or large; lavish; splendid: a sumptuous feast.

Quotes
In the sumptuous and enormous hotel room Rick Deckard sat reading the typed carbon sheets on the two androids Roy and Irmgard Baty.
-- Philip K. Dick, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, 1968

Origin
Sumptuous is related to the word sumptuary and comes from the Latin word sūmptus meaning "expense."

Dictionary.com

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Word of the Day - Hurdy-gurdy

Hurdy-gurdy
 \HUR-dee-GUR-dee, -gur-\,
noun:
1. a barrel organ or similar musical instrument played by turning a crank.
2. a lute- or guitar-shaped stringed musical instrument sounded by the revolution against the strings of a rosined wheel turned by a crank.

The whole fleet of vehicles caught in the circle stops and starts to the eye-rhythm established, and a loud fairground hurdy-gurdy on the sound track synchronises all the movements into an unexpected, ravishingly beautiful and joyous merry-go-round.
-- David Bellos, "Jacques Tati," 1999

The thump of rugs being beaten was sometimes joined by a hurdy-gurdy, which was painted brown and mounted on squalid cart wheels, with a circular design on its front depicting an idyllic brook…
-- Vladimir Nabokov, "The Gift," 1970

Hurdy-gurdy entered English in the 1740s. It is a variant of the Scots word hirdy-girdy meaning "uproar."

Dictionary.com

Daily Writing Tips - Head Words

Head Words
By Maeve Maddox

*English has several words that derive from caput, the Latin word for head. Here are just a few.

The words cap, caparison, cape, and capuchin all trace their origin to a garment that was worn over the head.

1. cap
Originally, the word referred to a hood. Unlike a hat, a cap does not have a brim. When a cap does not refer to something worn on a person’s head, it can mean something applied to the top of something. Bottles have caps, as do chimneys.

2. caparison
A fancy covering for a horse is called a caparison. Medieval knights rode caparisoned horses in jousting tournaments. What’s the connection with head? The word comes from Medieval Latin caparo, which was a type of cape worn by old women; part of the cape covered the head.

3. cape
Although now we think of a cape as fastening at the neck and hanging down around the shoulders, older capes included a part that covered the head, hence the name.

4. capuchin
A Capuchin is a friar of the order of St. Francis. Capuchins got the name from the fact that they wore a cape called a capuchin; it included a hood. Capuchin monkeys are so-called because of black hair at the back of their heads; someone thought the patch of hair looks like a hood or cowl.

5. chaperon
The Latin word caparo that gave us caparison also gives us our word chaperon. Originally the chaperon was a cap or hood worn by noblemen, but later it became a garment for women. I suppose that when the fashion was dropped by younger women, the older ones continued to wear them. In time chaperon came to mean an elderly woman who accompanies a young unmarried lady in public to protect her reputation. In current usage, a chaperon is any responsible person, man or woman, young or old, who accompanies younger people in a supervisory capacity.

6. per capita
A legal term relating to inheritance, per capita is used generally to mean “on an individual basis”: The per capital GDP is a measure of the total output of a country that takes the gross domestic product (GDP) and divides it by the number of people in the country.

7. capital and Capitol
As a noun, capital can mean “the head of a pillar or column,” or “the chief town in a region.” The first Capitol was the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline Hill in Rome. In general usage, the word could mean any citadel on the top of a hill. In American usage, “the Capitol” is the building occupied by the United States Congress in Washington D.C. Similar buildings occupied by state legislatures in the various states are also called Capitols. The state Capitol (building) is located in the state capital (city).

As an adjective, capital means “very important.” In Roman law, “capital punishment” could be death, but it could also be exile and the loss of property and citizenship, things that made life worth living for a Roman. In current usage, a “capital offense” is a crime punishable by death. “Capital punishment” is “death by execution.”

8. capitate, decapitate, capitulate, chapter
An adjective, capitate means “having a head.” In botany and zoology an organ or the long narrow part of an organ is said to be capitate if it has a distinct head-like knob at one end. Decapitate is a verb meaning to separate the head from the body. Chapter comes from the Latin word capitulum, “little head.” A chapter is the main division of a book. Capitulate looks as if it would have something to do with the Latin source of the word for capture, but it too is from caput. Agreements, including terms for a town’s surrender, were written out under headings.

9. capo, captain, chief, chef
The leader of a branch of the Mafia is a capo, Italian for head. The Italian word comes from good old caput. A captain is the head of whatever group is being led. Both chief and chef also descend from caput; both words translate literally as head. In heraldry, the chief is the top of the shield. Among people, the chief occupies the head position.

Chief entered English from French in the 14th century with the meaning head, as in leader; its cognate chef followed in the 19th century with the meaning, “head cook.”

*http://www.dailywritingtips.com/head-words/

Library Humor


Saturday, September 12, 2015

Apostrophe


You do not need an apostrophe when writing:
- 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, etc.
- CDs, PhDs, MAs, etc.
- As, Bs, Cs, Ds . . .Xs, Ys, Zs
- plurals (unless it may be confused with another word, i.e. As = A’s)

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

CMDshift Design
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink?

 But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not.

You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

If you’ve ever printed your own comics or design, these CMYK printing testers will take you back to the full-bleed days.

*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/

Word of the Day - Antebellum

antebellum \AN-tee-BEL-uhm\,
adjective:
before or existing before a war, especially the American Civil War; prewar: the antebellum plantations of Georgia.

Some of these ornate wooden structures are vast, every bit as grand in their own cluttered fashion as the great antebellum Greek Revival houses of the Garden District, which always put me in mind of temples, or the imposing town houses of the French Quarter itself.
-- Anne Rice, "The Tale of the Body Thief," 1992

Alone on the veranda, he had a chance to take in the antebellum atmosphere of Emily House, a large, rather overornate confection whose exterior might easily have been used for a remake of Gone with the Wind.
-- Eric Van Lustbader, "First Daughter," 2008

Antebellum entered English in the 1860s. It literally means "before the war" in Latin.

Dictionary.com

Friday, September 11, 2015

Word of the Day - Sessile

Photo: writerscircle.com
sessile \SES-il, -ahyl\,
adjective:
1. Zoology. permanently attached; not freely moving.
2. Botany. attached by the base, or without any distinct projecting support, as a leaf issuing directly from the stem.

And I was afraid of being grounded, sessile—stuck in one spot for eighteen years of oboe lessons and math homework that I couldn’t finish the first time around.
-- Ariel Levy, "Thanksgiving in Mongolia," The New Yorker, Nov. 18, 2013

Alfred was stretched out his full length in the sword of sun that shone through the thick branches of the sessile oak trees.
-- Catherine Coulter, "Rosehaven," 1997

Sessile stems from the Latin word sessilis which had a range of meanings including "fit for sitting on, low enough to sit on, and dwarfish (when referring to plants)." It entered English in the early 1700s.

Dictionary.com

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Omega’s Eye
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink? But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not. You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

The struggle for wifi is real.


*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/


Free Programs

Mindpop Programs Coming to Main Library

 







"The Genius of the Founding Fathers and the US Constitution -
Understanding Our Legal System and the Role of the Supreme Court"
Date : Saturday, September 19
Time:  11:00 AM
Presenter: Scott Hoh, Esq.

"Haunted Berks County"

Date :  Saturday, October 17
Time:  1:00 PM
Presenter: Charles J. Adams, III
.
Free Programs.
Click to register.. http://www.eventbrite.com/o/reading-public-library-7043192631
visit www.readingpubliclibrary.org

Word of the Day

atrabilious
\a-truh-BIL-yuh s\

adjective
1. gloomy; morose; melancholy; morbid.
2. irritable; bad-tempered; splenetic.

Quotes
It was remarked by Aristotle, who was a long way the shrewdest and most scientific observer of antiquity, that all men of genius have been melancholic or atrabilious.
-- James Sully, "Genius and Insanity," The Popular Science Monthly, August 1885

Origin
Atrabilious comes from the Latin ātra bīlis meaning "black bile." Black bile is one of the four elemental bodily humors of medieval physiology, regarded as causing melancholy. Atrabilious entered English in the mid-1600s.

Dictionary.com

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Learn How Vincent van Gogh Depicted a Cosmic Mystery in his “Starry Night”




Learn How Vincent van Gogh Depicted a Cosmic Mystery in his “Starry Night”

There are some phenomena in the universe that as-of-yet cannot be fully described with mere language, whether that language is linguistic or arithmetic. Turbulent flow is one of those phenomena.

If you aren’t familiar with the concept, turbulent flow is the natural movement of a fluid — meaning, a liquid or a gas — wherein the fluid shifts and mixes, apparently at random.

But it isn’t random. In 1941, Andrey Kolmogorov developed an equation that’s pretty close, albeit not exact, to describing how turbulence works in nature.

However, sixty years earlier, Vincent van Gogh — while in a state of self-alleged psychological turmoil — painted “Starry Night,” in which the sky’s shimmering swirls depict turbulence to near perfection, with eddies that nearly matched those of Kolmogorov’s future equation.

Art, it seems, had transcended knowledge. Watch the video to learn more.


Read more at http://blog.theliteracysite.com/van-gogh/#OWzlcSgJmFGmgi1R.99

Word of the Day

ballyhoo
\BAL-ee-hoo\

noun
1. a clamorous and vigorous attempt to win customers or advance any cause; blatant advertising or publicity.
2. clamor or outcry.

Quotes
The invasion of ballyhoo commenced in the spring of 1931, when a purchase of somewhat spectacular nature—that of the strange objects and inexplicably preserved bodies found in crypts beneath the almost vanished and evilly famous ruins of Chateau Faussesflammes, in Averoigne, France—brought the museum prominently into the news columns.
-- H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald, "Out of the Aeons," Weird Tales, April 1935

Origin
Ballyhoo is of uncertain origin. It gained prominence in the US as circus slang around 1900, but there is record of it being used to refer to an unseaworthy ship approximately 50 years earlier.

Dictionary.com

How to Make Symbols With Keyboard

Alt + 0153..... ™... trademark symbol
Alt + 0169.... ©.... copyright symbol
Alt + 0174..... ®....registered ­ trademark symbol
Alt + 0176 ...°......degree symbol
Alt + 0177 ...±....plus-or ­-minus sign
Alt + 0182 ...¶.....paragr­aph mark
...See More....smiley face
Alt + 2 ......☻.....black smiley face
Alt + 15.....☼.....sun
Alt + 12......♀.....female sign
Alt + 11.....♂......m­ale sign
Alt + 6.......♠.....spade
Alt + 5.......♣...... ­Club
Alt + 3.............. ­Heart
Alt + 4.......♦...... ­Diamond
Alt + 13......♪.....e­ighth note
Alt + 14......♫...... ­beamed eighth note
Alt + 8721.... ∑.... N-ary summation (auto sum)
Alt + 251.....√.....square root check mark
Alt + 8236.....∞..... ­infinity
Alt + 24.......↑..... ­up arrow
Alt + 25......↓...... ­down arrow
Alt + 26.....→.....r­ght arrow
Alt + 27......←.....l­eft arrow
Alt + 18.....↕......u­p/down arrow
Alt + 29......↔...lef­t right arrow

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Daily Writing Tips

*Study, Learn, and Read
by Maeve Maddox

Some ESL speakers have trouble with these verbs.

To study is to apply the mind to the acquisition of knowledge. Books are the first avenue that comes to mind, but as the object of study is the acquisition of knowledge, other means include observation and experiment. Play is a form of study for children.
Although the word learn is closely associated with study, the following sentences have completely different meanings:
I am studying German.
I am learning German.

Many a student studies a subject in school without learning it.
To read has several meanings. The most common is “to scan written or printed words and get meaning from them.”

One noteworthy usage difference between British and American English is the use of read in reference to postsecondary education. In the U.S., students go to the university “to study history” or some other subject; in England, they go to university “to read history.”

The idiom “to read up on” means “to study.” For example, “Before you travel to India, you may want to read up a little on the culture.”

Idioms with read:
to read between the lines: to draw conclusions not apparent from surface appearances. “She tells them that she cares for them, but when she turned down their last three dinner invitations, I could read between the lines.”

read my lips! Ordinarily, this expression is used to emphasize a speaker’s sincerity and resolve: “Listen carefully!” “Pay close attention!” “Take my word for it!” In 1988, the phrase became closely associated with G. H. W. Bush, who said, “Read my lips: No new Taxes!” when accepting the presidential nomination. Because Bush did raise taxes during his presidency, political writers often use the phrase ironically.

to read someone like a book: to understand a person’s character and thoughts by studying outward signs.

to read a person’s mind: to guess what a person is thinking or intending to do.

to read the Riot Act: The phrase originated in reference to an 18th century Act passed by the British Parliament following several serious riots. The Act authorized local officials to disperse any gathering of more than 12 people who were “unlawfully, riotously, and tumultuously assembled together.” An official would confront the group and read the part of the act that spelled out the consequences for refusing to obey. Nowadays the expression is used by adults in reference to noisy children: “Sounds like they’re getting pretty wild in there; you’d better go read them the Riot Act.”

Idioms with learn:
to learn by heart: to memorize
learn by rote: to learn by means of repetition, the way one learns the alphabet, the multiplication tables, and scientific phyla.
A learning curve is psychological jargon that has found a place in the general vocabulary. It means “the rate of a person’s progress in learning a new skill.” The expression derives from is a curve on a graph illustrating the rate of learning by a lab subject.

Modern usage distinguishes between learn and teach, but in Shakespeare’s time, learn was used in the sense of “teach”:
"The red plague rid you
for learning me your language! –Caliban, The Tempest I:ii (1611)"

This use survives in some dialects, but not in standard usage.

Fewer idioms with study come to mind:
study a face: to look closely at a face, as if to memorize its features.
study the options: to consider possible solutions to a problem or course of action.
be in a brown study: “A state of mental abstraction or musing; gloomy meditation. The word brown originally described a color so dark as to be almost black.

*http://www.dailywritingtips.com/study-learn-and-read/

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Literary Tattoos
*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink? But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not. You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

Interrobang, sometimes called the quexclamation mark, is the lit-nerdiest way to claim your grammar enthusiasm.

*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/

Word of the Day

polysemy
\POL-ee-see-mee, puh-LIS-uh-mee\

noun
1. diversity of meanings.

Quotes
The results of my grim-faced, slash-and-burn treks through the “polysemy” of canonical texts were infinitely duller and cruder than any of my naïve high school efforts to figure out what authors actually meant.
-- Zoë Heller, "Should an Author's Intentions Matter?" New York Times, March 10, 2015

Origin
Polysemy is a term from the field of linguistics. It can be traced to the Greek terms polý meaning "many" and sêma meaning "sign."

Dictionary.com

Monday, September 7, 2015

Daily Writing Tips - The Soft Sound of C

The Soft Sound of C
by Maeve Maddox

Shakespeare called z an “unnecessary” letter, but the letter c is probably a better candidate for the title.

In modern English, c is a substitute letter, a stand-in symbol for two English sounds that have distinctive letters to represent them. These sounds are /k/ and /s/, as in cat and cent.

C wasn’t always a mere substitute for the letters k and s. In Old English, c was the only symbol for the sound /k/. A note in the OED explains what happened:
When the Roman alphabet was introduced into Britain, C had only the sound /k/ ; and this value of the letter has been retained by all the insular Celts: in Welsh, Irish, Gaelic, C, c, is still only = /k/ . The Old English or ‘Anglo-Saxon’ writing was learned from the Celts, apparently of Ireland; hence C, c, in Old English, was also originally = /k/ : the words kin, break, broken, thick, seek, were in Old English written cyn, brecan, brocen, þicc, séoc.

In OE, as in Modern English, the letter s represented the sounds /s/ and /z/.
Before the end of the OE period, c became palatalized before e and i. Meanwhile, changes were going on in French spelling and pronunciation. Among other things, French adopted the letter k to represent the sound /k/ in some words. The Norman Conquest of England in 1066 spelled more than political disaster. The Norman scribes who ousted their English counterparts were accustomed to Latin and French spelling conventions. When the Normans invaded England, English spelling went from consistent to what it is today.

After the Conquest, c kept the /k/ sound in some English words like candle, cliff, corn, and crop, but in others, the sound /k/ was spelled with the new letter k, as in king, break, and seek.

Rule: In modern English, when the letter c occurs before the letters i, e, or y, it represents its “soft” sound: /s/.
Here are some examples:
C followed by e
accept (The first c in accept stands for the sound /k/; the second c stands for /s/.)
ace
acetate
celebrity
cell
incense
fence
C followed by i
acid
cider
cite
citrus
C followed by y
cyborg
piracy
bouncy
cycle
icy
infancy

If you find exceptions to the rule, please share them.
Note: This stated rule applies to the single letter c, not to letter combinations like ch, tch, or cious.
* http://www.dailywritingtips.com/the-soft-sound-of-c/

Subtly Tasteful Tattoos Only Literature Geeks Will Understand

Literary Tattoos

*You and your best book aren’t likely to have a messy breakup. Why not profess your book love in ink? But if those great big swaths of text aren’t really your style, fear not. You can get a literary design that shows your love in a tiny, elegant way. Bonus: when you go small, when someone “gets” your tattoo, you’ve made an instant connection.

Light your way with the candle from Shel Silverstein’s poem, “Invitation.”

“If you are a dreamer, come in.
If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar,
A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer . . .
If you’re a pretender, come sit by my fire,
For we have some flax golden tales to spin.
Come in!
Come in!”


*http://wordables.com/subtle-tattoos/

Word of the Day

twitterpated
\TWIT-er-pey-tid\

adjective
1. Informal. excited or overcome by romantic feelings; smitten.

Quotes
A major rite of passage in this pastoral Bildungsroman is the "Twitterpated" sequence where Bambi, Flower, and Thumper learn about springtime mating and the necessity to avoid it from Friend Owl…, who warns them: "nearly everyone gets twitterpated in the spring time."
-- Kirsten Moana Thompson, edited by Cynthia Lucia, Roy Grundmann, and Art Simon, "Classical Cel Animation, World War II, and Bambi, 2015

Origin
Twitterpated comes from the 1942 animated movie Bambi. It is a combination of twitter meaning "tremulous excitement," and pate as in "head" or "brain."

Dictionary.com

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Word of the Day

evanesce
 \ ev-uh-NES, EV-uh-nes \, verb;  
1.to disappear gradually; vanish; fade away.

Quotes:
The girl watched Linda as though she might evanesce  at any moment, trailing behind her, showing no affection, her bright eyes searching and expectant.
-- Tim Gautreaux, "The Missing ," 2009

Of course they evanesce  / with the climb of the sun. But this is one / of the many things I hate about having you gone. / If you were here none / of it could happen.
-- Catherine Carter, "Song for the Absent, with Hatchets," The Memory of Gills , 2006

Origin:
Evanesce  came to English in the early 1800s from the Latin ēvānēscere  meaning "to vanish."

Dictionary.com

The Fellowship of the Ring: Five Wise and Profound Quotes

*The Fellowship of the Ring: Five Wise and Profound Quotes
BY SARAH SELTZER JULY 29, 2015 3:45 PM

On this day(July 19) in 1954, J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring was first published. It’s the first book of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and it served as a bridge between the adventure story for children that was The Hobbit and the serious epic fantasy of its successors.

Fellowship is the only book in the trilogy that’s a relatively seamless narrative: it follows a quest that begins in the Shire and ends with the death of Boromir and the breakup of the titular group, with a series of comical and dark adventures in the first half of the book that routinely get excised from adaptations.

And indeed,while the movie adaptation gave us LOTR’s best memes (the “One does not simply walk into Mordor” meme and the “You shall not pass!” meme among others, for anyone who hasn’t been on the internet in the last ten years), the book itself happens to contain most of the most well-known and thought-provoking quotations from the trilogy.

Here are our favorites.

“‘I wish it need not have happened in my time,’ said Frodo.
‘So do I,’ said Gandalf, ‘and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.’”
— Gandalf reminds Frodo that as much as it hurts to be alive during dark, frightening and tumultuous times, it’s best to focus on the choices we do have. This one never ceases to be relevant since all time periods are at least a little bit dark and tumultuous.

 “’I don’t know half of you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve.’”
— Bilbo speaks for all of us at social gatherings, thinly disguising his misanthropic tendencies in a jolly toast.

 ‘”Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgement. For even the very wise cannot see all ends.’”
— Another piece of wisdom from Gandalf to Frodo that’s pertinent to our discussion around the death penalty, and revenge-based foreign policy.

 “’The wide world is all about you: you can fence yourselves in, but you cannot for ever fence it out.’”
— Gildor to Frodo, reminding us of one of Tolkien’s primary themes, which is that big evils far away end up having effects that we feel, even tucked away at home.

“And even in a mythical Age there must be some enigmas, as there always are. Tom Bombadil is one (intentionally)–“
— J.R.R Tolkien on Tom Bombadil, the strange and powerful figure who dominates the first half of the book and never makes it in to the adaptations. Older than most of the creatures in the book and uninterested in the affairs of the ring (he can see Frodo even when he wears it), he is rare a reminder in the trilogy that not everything fits into a black and white narrative.

“‘You can trust us to stick with you through thick and thin–to the bitter end. And you can trust us to keep any secret of yours–closer than you keep it yourself. But you cannot trust us to let you face trouble alone, and go off without a word. We are your friends, Frodo.’”

— Merry to Frodo on friendship. The loyalty of Merry and Pippin isn’t as clear in the films as in the books, where they know exactly what Frodo is up to and refuse to let him go on his quest alone. They don’t just stumble upon him. In Tolkien’s worldview, the friendship of the Hobbits for each other is never called into question. They don’t have the same doubts they do in the film.

*http://flavorwire.com/530465/the-fellowship-of-the-ring-five-wise-and-profound-quotes