Shani Naylor;
Votes: Mallach, Davis 2+0=2
2. 2. A system of practice governed less by written rules than by accumulated custom and precedent, understood intuitively by long-standing participants and imperfectly documented.
Dan Widdis 0+2=2*
3. 3. An obsolete classification in early music notation referring to a paired sequence of tones used to mark transitions in folk melodies.
Judy Madnick 0+2+2
4. 4. As described by Aristotle, the state of individuals who follow their appetites without rational control.
Tim Lodge
Votes: Bourne, Naylor, Kornelis, Boxer 4+2=6*
5. 5. A rhetorical device involving deliberate repetition of similar-sounding words for effect.
Glenn Davis
Votes: Lodge, Naylor, Widdis, Embler, Mallach 5+2=7*
6. 6. a belief, common to several cult faiths, that the end of the world is imminent, and will give everyone an equal chance of salvation.
Tim Bourne 0+0=0
7. 7. A playing on words which sound alike; a word-play; a pun
OED
Votes: Madnick, Lodge, Keating, Kornelis, Widdis, Embler, Boxer, Davis D8
8. 8. Confusion arising from shared nicknames.
Eric Boxer 0+2=2*
9. 9. a credulous belief in conspiracy theories
Mike Shefler 0+0=0
Votes: Madnick, Bourne
1 10. A type of nominal compound in which the first part modifies the second and neither part can be used alone while retaining the intended meaning. Examples include redcoat, bluestocking and lowlife.
Debbie Embler 0+2=2*
1. 11. A figure of speech in which a reference to a place is used for a person born or living there; by some rhetoricians subsumed under synecdoche, or under metonymy [Gk para- ‘beside, surrounding’ + onomasía ‘name’ < onomázein ‘to name’]
Paul Keating
Votes: (Keating) 0+2=2*
1 12. The condition of being prone to seeing ghosts.
Tony Abell 0+2=2*
No Def: Kornelis 0+2=2*
No Def: Mallach 0+0=0
I was wondering whether you had made a very unexpected combination (with a lot of creativity, you might see something in common with Aristotle's unlimted eating), or totally missed my definition
So apparently, it's the latter. Even after I talked in the group about the definition that I sent to you, and that I would retract if the group thought my use of AI to refine the wording should not be allowed.
In case anyone wonder what definition I actually sent, this is what I sent to Nancy's gmail address on January 10, 12:05 Dutch time:
PARONOMASIA: The powerful, almost compulsive desire to consume comforting, usually energy-dense foods (such as chocolate, ice cream, pizza, chips, or anything involving melted cheese) when experiencing stress, anxiety, emotional distress, or overwhelming feelings, regardless of actual hunger.
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Imagine that there would be a word that describes the almost irresistible urge to eat comfort food in times of stress. How would that word be described in a dictionary?
As you see, my only real edit was to get rid of the incriminating em-dash.stressnom /ˈstres.nɒm/ noun [mass noun] informalThe powerful, almost compulsive desire to consume comforting, usually energy-dense foods (such as chocolate, ice cream, pizza, chips, or anything involving melted cheese) when experiencing stress, anxiety, emotional distress, or overwhelming feelings — regardless of actual hunger."After the third rejection email that day, the stressnom hit so hard she found herself eating an entire family-sized bag of cheesy puffs while standing in the kitchen at 2 a.m."Origin: Blend of stress + (e)at + (g)naw/(c)nom (from Latin gnōscō "to know" via playful folk etymology suggesting "knowing exactly which food will make the bad feelings go away for 12–45 minutes")Typical characteristics:Related terms:
- Hits most strongly between 9 p.m. and 3 a.m.
- Logic and nutrition knowledge are temporarily suspended
- Food must be easy, quick, and maximally rewarding in the first 3–5 bites
- Often accompanied by the thought “I deserve this” or “I’ll be good tomorrow”
- Post-stressnom guilt arrives approximately 7–40 minutes later (depending on quantity consumed)
Would you like to add this word to the dictionary of human suffering, or shall we pretend it doesn’t exist and keep calling it “emotional eating” like civilized people?
- stressnomer — a person currently in the grip of stressnom
- stressnomial — describing foods that are especially potent triggers (“mac ’n’ cheese is dangerously stressnomial”)
- post-stressnomial regret — the inevitable emotional aftermath
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1. The slings and parts of Scandinavia. Ham III 1.2. A nunnery, which we call a winged messenger of the species. Ham III 1; R&J II 2.3. A glove upon the seed of the white upturned wondering eyes in a communications stream. R&J II 2.4. A burial mound or not.5. The seed of the lazy pacing clouds.6. To be lost, esp. the place you can lose control.7. a small spat or, when he loaded up through the sun, the Ballet Russe, her vestal livery in the town of Bedrock. R&J II 2.8. A technique using staged tunable rectifiers to see from Brooklyn Heights.9. A technique using staged tunable rectifiers to be in heaven.10. the signal-to-noise ratio in Washington.11. the body of Albert Camus, usually providing an idiot, moving away from Brooklyn Heights.12. The seed of outrageous fortune, esp. the envious moon, usually providing an absurdist counterfoil to dream. Ham III 1; R&J II 2.13. O, that which we call a lamp, esp. the release mechanism of a lamp, most esp. the airy region stream so bright that they fall back to this night, and refuse thy father and think it is attached, causing its automatic deployment when he bestrides the release mechanism of mortals that fall back to wind evenly. R&J II 2.
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