words with ted chiang and others

Maybe you're tired of learning new words with me and I know that not many of them stick the first time. Actually,  I often seed my list with words I sort of know but don't have a firm grasp on, or pick them up  them in a different context.  So most of the words in the current list are from Ted Chiang's book of short stories - science fiction with a different vocabulary.  

knurl  noun  a small projecting knob or ridge, especially in a series around the edge of something.  DERIVATIVES   knurled adjective  ORIGIN early 17th cent.: apparently a derivative of knurl.

I like that one.  Chiang used it as an adjective to describe wheels. 

euonym:  euonymus  noun  a shrub or small tree that is widely cultivated for its autumn colours and bright fruit.  ●Genus Euonymus, family Celastraceae: numerous species, including the spindle tree.   ORIGIN modern Latin (named by Linnaeus), from Latin euonymos, from Greek euōnumos ‘having an auspicious or honoured name’, from eus ‘good’ + onoma ‘name’.

Linnaean (system of classification):   Linnaeus, Carolus (1707–78), Swedish botanist, founder of modern systematic botany and zoology; Latinized name of Carl von Linné. He devised an authoritative classification system for flowering plants involving binomial Latin names (later superseded by that of Antoine Jussieu), and also a classification method for animals    .DERIVATIVES  Linnaean (also Linnean) adjective& noun

dimorphic adjective chiefly Biology occurring in or representing two distinct forms: in this sexually dimorphic species only the males have wings.  DERIVATIVESdimorphism nounORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Greek dimorphos (from di- ‘twice’ + morphē ‘form’) + -ic.

ontogenic:  ontogeny noun [mass noun]  the branch of biology that deals with ontogenesis. Compare with phylogeny.• another term for ontogenesis.  DERIVATIVES adjective,ontogenically |- adverb  ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from Greek ōn, ont- ‘being’ + -geny.

 ontogenesis  noun [ mass noun ] Biology  the development of an individual organism or anatomical or behavioural feature from the earliest stage to maturity. Compare with phylogenesis  DERIVATIVES ontogenetic adjective, ontogenetically   adverb  ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from Greek ōn, ont- ‘being’ + genesis ‘birth’.

hermeneutics  plural noun [ usu. treated as sing. ]  the branch of knowledge that deals with interpretation, especially of the Bible or literary texts.  hermeneutic  adjective  concerning interpretation, especially of the Bible or literary texts.  noun  a method or theory of interpretation.  DERIVATIVES hermeneutical adjective,hermeneutically adverb ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from Greek hermēneutikos, from hermēneuein ‘interpret’.

COBOL noun [ mass noun ]  a computer programming language designed for use in commerce.  ORIGIN  1960s: from co(mmon) b(usiness) o(rented) l(anguage).  [I Love Acronyms!]

terabyte (abbrev.: Tb or TB) noun Computing  a unit of information equal to one million million (1012) or, strictly, 240 bytes.

aprodosia   not in the online dictionary, but I know it, even without reading the story which is what it is about.  I have prosopagnosia,  i.e. face blindness.  I can't map a face, can't remember faces until I see them a number of times.  This can be very embarrassing or alienating.. People think I'm rude or ignoring them. I didn't know what it was until I read an article in the New Yorker a few years ago about tOliver Sacks () before he died. He had it, worse than mine.  since then I have discovered that Brad Pitt has it and Tom Stoppard.   Anyway, that osia  fives it away.  In Chiang's story people with aprodosia can't distinguish between appearances, good-looking or not so.

onager noun  an animal of a race of the Asian wild ass native to northern Iran.●Equus hemionus onager, family Equidae. Compare with kiangkulan.  ORIGIN Middle English: via Latin from Greek onagros, from ohos ‘ass’ + agrios ‘wild’.  

spall  verb  [ with obj. ]  break (ore, rock, or stone) into smaller pieces, especially in preparation for sorting. the ore was spalled by young women seated at anvils.• [ no obj. ] (of ore, rock, or stone) break off in fragments: cracks below the surface cause slabs of material to spall off.   noun  a splinter or chip, especially of rock.  ORIGIN  late Middle English (as a noun): of unknown origin. The verb dates from the mid 18th cent.

ziggurat |noun  (in ancient Mesopotamia) a rectangular stepped tower, sometimes surmounted by a temple. Ziggurats are first attested in the late 3rd millennium bc and probably inspired the biblical story of the Tower of Babel (Gen. 11:1–9).  [One of Chiang's stories is about the Tower of Babel.]

homunculus  (also homuncule)  noun (pl. homunculi or homuncules)  a very small human or humanoid creature.• historical a microscopic but fully formed human being from which a fetes was formerly believed to develop.  ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from Latin, diminutive of homo, homin- ‘man’.

parthenogenesis  noun [ mass noun ] Biology reproduction from an ovum without fertilisation, especially as a normal process in some invertebrates and lower plants. cyclic parthenogenesis is well displayed in aphids. DERIVATIVES parthenogenetic   adjective  ,parthenogenetically adverb ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: modern Latin, from Greek parthenos ‘virgin’ + genesis ‘creation’.  [I knew this one only from my Greek mythology - Zeus, you know.]

paralinguistic   adjective  relating to or denoting paralanguage or the non-lexical elements of communication by speech.

tautology   noun (pl. tautologies) [ mass noun ]  the saying of the same thing twice over in different words, generally considered to be a fault of style (e.g. they arrived one after the other in succession).• [ count noun ] a phrase or expression in which the same thing is said twice in different words.• Logic a statement that is true by necessity or by virtue of its logical form.  DERIVATIVES tautological  adjective ,tautologically  adverb,    tautologist noun,tautologize (also tautologise)  verb, tautologous  adjective  ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: via late Latin from Greek, from tautologies ‘repeating what has been said’, from tauto- ‘same’ + -logos (see -logy) . [I LOVE TO USE THIS: i.e. repeat something someone has just said - it adds a nice touch of humour to a scene.]

This last word is not from Chiang. I got it from the Manchester Guardian and I guess I should have known it before. It is used commonly now in Europe, more than in North America: Shoah noun (the Shoah: another term for the Holocaust (see holocaust).   ORIGIN modern Hebrew, literally ‘catastrophe.

There.  Another day, another blog. 

 

 

 

on and on

Here we are both of us refreshed and repowered. I needed the rest, too. I have been working very hard to try  to make sense of my screenplay, the one I have written over the last 7 months with that screenwriting course. I hope to finish it (in a manner of speaking) this weekend but before I plunge back into the depths, I caught up with yesterday's blog, to polish and correct, and now to  write today's blog before I disappear.

I was thinking about my reference yesterday to Jean Kerr and all the others from an earlier generation who I cite and who taught me the little aphorisms and lessons I love so well.  I'm still reading current writers and seeing current movies (but I have given up on current music). In time I'm sure today's wonders will become tomorrow's icons, but I am not sure I can identify them.  I'll run a few writers by you, ones that I have been drawn to recently, and see if any of them resonate (aka ring a bell) with you.

Of course, you know I spent a lot of time this year reading Black Eagle and Grey Falcon by Rebecca West. She is already an icon so I won't dwell.  Lauren Groff is a hot new American novelist whose writing skill dazzles but who, as I read more, leaves me wondering about her heart. The results aren't in yet.  I've been reading more women's diaries, but that's a private, idiosyncratic pursuit I will not burden you with.  Earlier this year, after I had seen the movie Arrival, I bought the book of short stories by Ted Chiang, Stories of Your Life, and Others.  The movie is based on the eponymous title story. I have just finished reading the rest of it and my next word search will be triggered by Chiang - not only brilliant but also a science fiction nerd with esoteric knowledge far beyond mine.

I've started pedalling again on a stationary bicycle and the only way I can stay on it for half an hour is to read a mystery/thriller/detective story/ whatever, to hold me there.  I read another one by Arnaldur Indriðason, Strange Shores, and yes, there was a murder, but it's a character-driven, mood piece. Now I have just begun my first Dennis Lehane book, Moonlight Mile. Set in Boston, several of his books have been made into movies by Clint Eastwood, winning awards in the process. I romped slowly through a Roald Dahl book, The BFG (Big, Friendly Giant) - I say slowly because I read it aloud to my son Matt. He can read functionally but he does not  easily read for pleasure so I read to both of us for pleasure.  His understanding is ahead of his skill. He enjoys word play and BFG is full of that.

What else? I'm sure I'll think of more - -oh yes,  two of the three The Little Old Lady series, but my script awaits.

Anon, anon, and on and on...