Posted on 04/20/2024 8:03:25 AM PDT by Chicory
13. Sparple
This word is not only fun to say, it can also come in handy. It means to deflect attention from one thing by making a big deal of something else entirely.
(Excerpt) Read more at ef.edu ...
Apart from it's silliness, the action it esxribes happens so frequently nowadays that I think we need it.
Oops! it’s = its, and esxribes = describes
My Irish grandmother used ‘flummoxed’ a lot.
True! Fun article. Thanks!
I recall Rush Limbaugh used “flummoxed” a lot.
Oh, i thought you were being cheeky and demonstrating a few medeval words of your own. :)
Quixotic, Sinecure, Flummox, Blandish, Nefarious, Garrulous, Fastidious.....All pretty common today, at least in MY vocabulary. But “sparple”? I like it. An appropriate word for certain FR posters, so I’ll start using it regularly.
I use flummox, sinecure, nefarious, fastidious, quixotic occasionally without trying to be medieval or obscure. While sinecure might technically be a late medieval word in English, it is barely translated Latin going back a LOT farther.
This is a fun article. Some of these words are perfect.
BTW EF Education sponsors a pretty solid Tour d’France bicycle racing team/
I don’t think you should have apologized for typing “esxribes”. Instead pass it off as another medieval word. And who knows? Maybe it will catch on.
esxribe: To provide an essential description of something.
Sparple sounds like a carbonated drink brand
I use about half of them already.
So did my dad, who was raised by his Irish parents.
Or a MLP dragon.
Does a fopdoodle emit flapdoodle?
My grandfather’s family were Scottish, and my grandmother’s family were Irish. When we were little, they called us their little ‘Tulla Tulla’s”. I finally looked it up and Tulla is a medieval town in Ireland. I think it’s called Tulloch now, according to a search of the name.
My grandfather called city dwellers ‘lowlanders or flatlanders’ and mountain people ‘highlanders’. I am descended from the original hillbillies of the Appalachians since the 1700’s. LOL
Could pass for ebonics.
projection
I’ve seen people use nefarious fairly regularly.
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