neologism

This is a companion post to last month’s Alcoholic Watergate Hamburgers post. (I just learned that a com-pan-ion is someone with whom you eat bread. So adorable.)

So my friend [ɦɑnɑ] has been playing Jeremina Paxmina for the University of York University Challenge team for the last few months, and while their fate in the tournament is a mystery until July, Hannah’s involvement in British quizzing got me to look into the serious fare offered in the UK. Here’s what I found: Serious British quiz shows are MEAN. They are unforgiving, humorless, exacting, and demanding of minutiae in zero seconds. I checked out University Challenge episodes on Youtube, as well as Only Connect, a Question of Genius, Countdown, Eggheads, and Mastermind.

My favorite of the bunch is Only Connect, which ruthlessly demands teams to find the connection between words with the fewest clues possible. (I made my own Only Connect Wall but I wasn’t able to upload it onto the site.) On the Champions of Champions episode last August, one question revealed the word Marathon, followed by Hamburger, Alcoholic, and finally Watergate. Having recently written about this, I knew the connection when I saw Hamburger.

[and then suddenly…]

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March 22, 2012

in best post ever,career,english,greek,IPA,neologism,wordnik,Words & Origins,yiddish

Anticipicaketion

/æntɪsɪpəkajkθən/

n. the unfortunate state of being in which one must wait for it to be time to eat cake.
Related terms:
Caketicipation
/kajktɪsɪpajθən/
n. the state of being in which Dr. Frankenfurter sees you shiver, waiting for cake. (obsolete)
Justificaketion
/dʒʌstɪfɪkajkθən/
n. the reasoning that leads one to justify eating cake. i.e. “I had a salad for lunch and I’ve never seen a cake like that before.”

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August 9, 2010

in cake,IPA,neologism,new term,Words & Origins