MetaChat is an informal place for MeFites to touch base and post, discuss and
chatter about topics that may not belong on MetaFilter. Questions? Check the FAQ. Please note: This is important.
23 March 2007
I just used the word "modicum" in conversation... →[More:]...and got a funny look. I want some more words that will elicit the same response!
Callipgyan is my current favorite, though terpsicordian came up recently and got axed by my copy editor.
(I have a running battle with them— They insist that the college paper should have, at most, an eigth-grade reading level. I insist that we're in fucking college, and therefore, a college-aged reading level is more appropriate. Further, the students can buy a fucking dictionary, since the point of using big words is to use fewer and meet wordcount while saying exactly what I want to. Plus, I can't swear like I'd like to, which means that I have to be circumabulatorily coy when I want to call Bullshit.)
I use the word "hemiola" all the time, and "pseudo-hemiola" when I'm talking about other polyrhythms that have a similar feel. When I'm in the swirl of a hemiolic structure, I feel like a Mevlevi dervish: wherever I turn, I see the face of God.
I use the prefix sesqui all the time. My favourite combo is the sesquifortnight to denote ten days (a unit English sorrily needs) and sesquicentennial because it sounds so good.
klangklangston I love callipgyan but I've used it enough that in my circle where it's appropriate that everyone know what it means. But what does terpsicordian mean? The closest word I could find was terpsicordian.
Terpsichore is the Muse of dance and lyric poetry, and 'terpsochordian' means 'having to do with dance,' or something along those general lines. Is that what you're thinking of?
It's actually terpsichorean, which is why I rarely make fun of people's spelling, especially when there isn't a red underline reminding me to check it...