Omniloquent (adj) = able to talk about any and all subjects
"The keynote speaker was known for his omniloquent speeches that could captivate any audience, regardless of their background or interests." --ChatGPT
Musings and oozings (mostly about words) by Michael Gates
Omniloquent (adj) = able to talk about any and all subjects
"The keynote speaker was known for his omniloquent speeches that could captivate any audience, regardless of their background or interests." --ChatGPT
OUROBORIC (adj) = self-referring. "...a unique ouroboric self-mirroring structure whereby the sky mirrors the earth and vice-versa." --Jadran Mimica, "Explorations in Psychoanalytic Ethnography" (2007)
What's "the word I'm thinking of"? Today, it's...
JENTICULATE [jen-TIK-yew-LATI] (verb)
To eat breakfast
"Essentially,
Agamemnon gives a long speech commanding the Greeks to jenticulate
(which is the posh way of saying eat your breakfast)." --Mark Forsyth,
"The Horologicon" (2013)
Pooling in heel-prints
I think I am going up
Love is a shadow
What's "the word I'm thinking of"? Today, it's...
MAMMONISM [MAM-un-IS-em] (noun)
The greedy pursuit of riches
"Between Mammonism and myself there is a war to the knife, the knife to the hilt, the hilt to the hand."
--Mercer Green Johnston, "Patriotism and Radicalism" (1917)
What's "the word I'm thinking of"? Today, it's...
FRONDESCENTIA [FRON-dess-SEN-tee-UH] (noun)
It refers to the "leafing season", or the time of the year when plants unfold their leaves -- springtime, in other words.
"Frondescentia is the leafing of a plant; florescentia is, for like reason, the flowering of a plant."
--"The Analectic Magazine" (1817)
What's "the word I'm thinking of"? Today, it's...
ICARIAN [ih-KAIR-ee-UHN] (adjective or noun)
Having qualities similar to the Greek mythological character Icarus, especially his excessive ambition and recklessness
"Predictably, the hazardous displays of the Icarian are prone to provoke countertransference reactions that, much like a failed parachute, collapse an analytic attitude."
--Terrence McBride, Maureen Murphy, "Trauma and the Destructive-Transformative Struggle" (2019)
What's "the word I'm thinking of"? Today, it's...
DYSANIA [dis-AY-nee-uh] (noun)
The state of having a hard time waking up and getting out of bed in the morning
"Will our postdigital universe emerge carelessly from the griffonages of a soggy-brained professor, afflicted with dysania, or from some bio-powered hard drive afflicted by a crapulent program created by some cocaine-addicted technician working a second job in a meth lab?"
--Peter McLaren, Petar Jandric, Postdigital Dialogues on Critical Pedagogy, Liberation Theology and Information Technology (2020)
What's "the word I'm thinking of"? Today, it's...
SOMNICULOUS [som-NIC-yoo-luss] (adjective)
Sleepy or drowsy
"She soon went to sleep, but dreamt of distresses and vexations, of exertions demanded, and powers not to be excited; of falling from precipices, of painful adieus, and of boats foundering in shoreless waters, and was haunted by all the train of somniculous misery, which the superstitious resolve into causes, and the less weak into effects."
--Laetitia Matilda Hawkins, The Countess and Gertrude (1812) (TWITO, page 139)
What's the word I'm thinking of? Today, it's...
STHENIA [STHEE-nee-uh] (noun)
strength, energy, vitality
"The first condition he called sthenia," I explained. "Meaning lots of energy." "Correct. And the other group, by distinction had a-sthenia." "No energy." "Correct again. You do know your etymology, Samantha."
--Beach Conger, It's Probably Nothing: More Adventures of a Vermont Country Doctor (2011)
What's the word I'm thinking of? Today, it's...
PANDICULATE [pan-DIK-yuh-LAYT] (verb)
To stretch and yawn simultaneously
"I'm troubled with pandiculation, An ailment dire and rooted deep 'Tis caused by undue hesitation In rising from the couch of sleep." --George W. E. Daniels, "Pandiculation", in The Medical Pickwick (1921) (TWITO, page 106)
What's the word I'm thinking of? Today, it's....
CHELONIAN [che-LO-nee-UN] (noun or adjective)
A turtle or like a turtle or tortoise (i.e., slow)
"Weighed down by bickering and blather, the farm bill crept through Congress at a chelonian pace."
--Valerie Strauss, The Washington Post (2013)