[Dixonary] Round 3256 SPANGHEW results

9 views
Skip to first unread message

Efrem Mallach

unread,
Jun 3, 2022, 11:09:29 PM6/3/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
Folks,

SPANGHEW is the (to many people) unbelievable activity of striking frogs and toads with a stick so they'll fly into the air, def. #7. John Barrs and Dan Widdis found it believable, though, giving me a D2. Shani Naylor knew the word, and was DQ.

Voting ended in a three-way tie among Judy Madnick, Dan Widdis, and Nancy Shepherdson, with four points each. As mentioned, two of Dan's points came from his correct vote. The next tie-breaker was therefore between Judy and Nancy. Nancy has no points in the rolling scores, while Judy has - drum roll, please - ONE! Judy is the next dealer by a whisker, while Nancy will now have a much higher rolling score of (at least) 4 for the next few rounds and might win the next tie-breaker she's in. 

A statistical oddity: people tended to vote for the longer definitions, with the six definitions longer than the real one (which was at the middle of the list) getting 17 of the 18 votes cast versus just one for the six shorter ones. Five of the short definitions received no votes, but none of the longer ones. There was a 76% correlation between a definition's length and the number of votes it received, including the real definition in that calculation. Since Excel was kind enough to draw a chart of this relationship, I figured I might as well include it here. It's at the bottom. Feel free to ignore it with a dismissive comment such as "Oh, he's an engineer."

Full results:

1. [S. Boston Dial.] A hairball. From Shefler, M. who voted 9, 13. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

2. The art of clay whittling (as opposed to wood). From Embler, D. who voted 8, 13. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

3. A board game resembling ludo, played in the Royal Navy. From Naylor, S. who was DQ. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

4. A decorative fence that does not fully enclose or block access to an area. From Abell, T. who did not vote. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

5. A piece of wood split off from timber, esp. such a piece used in building a fire. From Keating, P. who voted 10, 11. Voted for by: Widdis, D. Score: 1.

6. To divide a word via syllabification derived from a combination of Spanish and English. From Fein, D. who voted 9, 11. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

7. [Scots, Nor. Eng.] To strike and cause to fly in the air, said esp. of frogs and toads.  From Dictionary which could not vote. Voted for by: Barrs, J.; Widdis, D. Score: D2.

8. An attempt to hit a golf-ball across a lake [loch] by causing it to skip along bouncing on the water surface. From Barrs, J. who voted *7*, 13. Voted for by: Embler, D. Score: 3.

9. A type of recovery crane used to right large overturned vehicles or retrieve any sort of vehicle from otherwise inaccessible areas. From Shepherdson, N. who voted 10, 11. Voted for by: Shefler, M.; Fein, D.; Madnick, J.; Lodge, T. Score: 4.

10. A tract of poor, sandy, undulating or hilly land near the sea, covered with fine turf which serves chiefly for the grazing of sheep. From Widdis, D. who voted 5, *7*. Voted for by: Keating, P.; Shepherdson, N. Score: 4.

11. A form of comic or satiric verse, consisting of two couplets of metrically irregular lines, containing the name of a well-known person. From Madnick, J. who voted 9, 12. Voted for by: Keating, P.; Fein, D.; Shepherdson, N.; Lodge, T. Score: 4.

12. A Pidgin, or compound, language, originating in the Philippines during the 17th century, and containing elements of Spanish, Chinese and Malay. From Mallach, A. who did not vote. Voted for by: Madnick, J. Score: 1.

13. A component of medieval plate armor, consisting of an extra plate covering the front of the shoulder and the armpit, worn over the top of a pauldron. From Lodge, T. who voted 9, 11. Voted for by: Shefler, M.; Embler, D.; Barrs, J. Score: 3.

As a table, with tied scores in random order:


Efrem

Paul Keating

unread,
Jun 4, 2022, 2:51:21 AM6/4/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
That's a fascinating observation about length attracting votes. I had thought that brevity was the virtue that brought more than just its own reward. 

Let's see if it holds over a few more rounds. Going back over past rounds is possible too, but strikes me as too much work.

P

Judy Madnick

unread,
Jun 4, 2022, 8:48:35 AM6/4/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
I thought I was quite safe since my rolling score was just 1. 
 
New word soon.
 
Judy


Original Message
From: "'Efrem Mallach' via Dixonary" <dixo...@googlegroups.com>
Date: 6/3/2022 11:09:20 PM
Subject: [Dixonary] Round 3256 SPANGHEW results

Efrem G Mallach

unread,
Jun 4, 2022, 8:57:13 AM6/4/22
to 'Efrem Mallach' via Dixonary
FWIW, the record for most points in a round (14, 12 of which were from votes) was set in Round 2664 with ""[Gr.] a dramatic structure in which the chorus provides the audience with information that the characters in a drama would already know" as a fake definition of cacöthes. That def is 138 characters long and would have been #12 in the Round 3256 list.

That said, short ones have won at times too. I'll post what happens in the next few rounds to see if it's a pattern.

Efrem

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Dixonary" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to dixonary+u...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/dixonary/CAHViCzCw42QR4LiCVV%3Dj1jRkKFOdY_LBv5f3fJ8QuVfO0CGNVQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Paul Keating

unread,
Jun 5, 2022, 2:53:06 PM6/5/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com, nancy shepherdson
All,

We are well over the limit for announcing a new word. The rules say to allow 24 hours but we are now headed for 48. And it's not a US holiday weekend (that I know of), though it is in the UK, New Zealand, France and Holland, in all of which we have players; and probably elsewhere. In the UK it's the Jubilee, and for the rest of us it is Whit Monday tomorrow.

Nancy, can you step up? 

P

Judy Madnick

unread,
Jun 5, 2022, 2:58:02 PM6/5/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
I sent a new worlword yesterday!  Let me repost in about 15 minutes. 

Judy

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Dixonary" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to dixonary+u...@googlegroups.com.

Judy Madnick

unread,
Jun 5, 2022, 3:02:50 PM6/5/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
Sorry, I meant Friday I sent it 

Judy

On Sun, Jun 5, 2022, 2:53 PM Paul Keating <dixo...@boargules.com> wrote:
--

Judy Madnick

unread,
Jun 5, 2022, 3:21:01 PM6/5/22
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
I've posted a new word twice in the past few minutes, in addition to yesterday, and the message isn't showing up. I've posted from my laptop and directly from the group site. I'm not getting an error message. This is getting old very fast. Now I'm using my phone, and those messages are going through. Other people are receiving my emails. 

Judy

On Sun, Jun 5, 2022, 2:53 PM Paul Keating <dixo...@boargules.com> wrote:
--
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages