3586 🏆 DOG’S LETTER

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Paul Keating

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Oct 7, 2025, 5:22:18 PM (5 days ago) Oct 7
to Google Group, Mike Shefler

It’s been a brief and brisk voting phase. All the submitters have voted and so I am ending the round.

The phrase littera canina meaning R was a conceit of the Roman poet Persius (Aulus Persius Flaccus, 34–62 AD), whom I must admit I had never heard of before this round. The resemblance of the R sound to a dog growling is assumed to be because metropolitan Latin of his day had what we would call a ‘rolled R’. It’s a fair assumption: Italian still rolls its Rs to this day. Johnny Barrs tells me he came across the phrase letra canina in the same sense when learning Spanish. Though whether the Spanish R growls depends on the company it finds itself in; much like a dog, I suppose.

Persius was admired in the Middle Ages and was accorded translations in French, German and English. 17th-century English writers (William Vaughan, Ben Jonson) adopted the conceit as dog’s letter in imitation of the Latin, even though southeastern English at the time did not have a rolled R. Ben Jonson himself said as much. And so the resemblance to a dog growling was a bit far-fetched. And it still is: only one player found #9 plausible.

There was a tied score of 4 + 0 = 4 for Mike Shefler and Dan Widdis. Mike wins on the rolling-scores tiebreak.


1

A boarding kennel.

No votes

Submitted by: Tim Bourne, who voted for 5, 7.

2

A children’s story written from a dog’s perspective. See also the “Dog Alphabet” series.

Vote from Judy Madnick

Submitted by: Johnny Barrs, who did not vote (DQ). Score: 1.

3

A chocolate suet pudding, popular in Scotland.

Vote from Glenn Davis

Submitted by: Tim Lodge, who voted for 5, 11. Score: 1.

4

A courier who delivers letters or parcels via dog-drawn sledges.

No votes

Submitted by: Eric Boxer, who voted for 6, 7.

5

A decoy character inserted into a cipher to disrupt pattern-recognition algorithms and obscure true message structure.

Votes from Tim Bourne, Tim Lodge, Dan Widdis

Submitted by: Judy Madnick, who voted for 2, 6. Score: 3.

6

A document exempting a retired sailor from impressment in the British Navy.

Votes from Eric Boxer, Judy Madnick, Efrem Mallach, Shani Naylor

Submitted by: Mike Shefler, who voted for 11, 12. Score: 4.

7

An excuse or explanation that is technically true but deliberately unhelpful or evasive.

Votes from Tim Bourne, Eric Boxer, Dan Widdis

Submitted by: Glenn Davis, who voted for 3, 12. Score: 3.

8

The initial letter of names given to purebred dogs in France that has been designated annually since 1926 by the pedigree registry LOF.

Vote from Debbie Embler

Submitted by: Rey, who did not vote (DQ). Score: 1.

9

A name for the letter R (from its resemblance in sound to the snarl of a dog).

Vote from Shani Naylor

Real Definition. Score: D1.

10

The position of a dog’s ears which communicates their state of mind.

No votes

Submitted by: Debbie Embler, who voted for 8, 11.

11

A precursor to the modern comma, used in medieval manuscripts as a breath mark, characterized by a small curved tail (ꝯ).

Votes from Debbie Embler, Tim Lodge, Efrem Mallach, Mike Shefler

Submitted by: Dan Widdis, who voted for 5, 7. Score: 4.

12

A wall clock with pendulum and weights exposed.

Votes from Glenn Davis, Mike Shefler

Submitted by: Shani Naylor, who voted for 6, 9. Score: 2+2=4*.


No definition from Efrem Mallach, who voted for 6, 11.


Def no

Player

Voted for

Votes from

Score from votes

Correct guess

Total

6

Shefler

11, 12

Boxer, Madnick, Mallach, Naylor

4


4

11

Widdis

5, 7

Embler, Lodge, Mallach, Shefler

4


4

12

Naylor

6, 9

Davis, Shefler

2

2

4*

7

Davis

3, 12

Bourne, Boxer, Widdis

3


3

5

Madnick

2, 6

Bourne, Lodge, Widdis

3


3

3

Lodge

5, 11

Davis

1


1

2

Barrs

DQ

Madnick

1


1

8

Rey

DQ

Embler

1


1

No definition

Mallach

6, 11




0

4

Boxer

6, 7




0

10

Embler

8, 11




0

1

Bourne

5, 7




0



--
Paul Keating
Soustons, Nouvelle Aquitaine, France

Shani Naylor

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Oct 7, 2025, 6:31:53 PM (5 days ago) Oct 7
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
And the voting completed on 6 & a half hours - that must be a record!



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Daniel B. Widdis

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Oct 7, 2025, 6:40:33 PM (5 days ago) Oct 7
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I liked this version of the results better than the corrected one.

Also I resisted commenting during voting that definition 12 was the real definition of a dog-related word I dealt way back in round 1121.

--

Daniel B. Widdis

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Oct 7, 2025, 7:11:18 PM (5 days ago) Oct 7
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And it still is: only one player found #9 plausible.

Nice D1.  But I must note, a plurality of players found  plausible.

A medieval precursor to the comma actually did exist, but it looked much more like what we would simply call a forward slash:  /.  




On Tue, Oct 7, 2025 at 2:22 PM Paul Keating <dixo...@boargules.com> wrote:
--

Paul Keating

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Oct 8, 2025, 3:10:26 AM (4 days ago) Oct 8
to Google Group
And the the character you provided, ꝯ, is a mediaeval scribal contraction that is fittingly named con. 

Paul Keating

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Oct 8, 2025, 8:09:32 AM (4 days ago) Oct 8
to dixo...@googlegroups.com
It probably is. I am generally happy if I can end voting within 24 hours, because I believe a good pace makes for a more enjoyable game for everyone, but I don't get to do even that very often. 

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