the day before

blog, March 31, 2018

Not much to report today.  Too busy.   I swam of course, never miss that.  Baked apple-pecan bran muffins as a hostess gift (didn’t have any wine).   Got home from a family brunch in time to putter a bit and watch the Blue Jays game, third of the new season (vs. Yankees) and they won, first of the new season.  Kevin Pilar stole three bases in one inning!

After that I was totally lazy, watched a couple of old movies.  But here’s the funny thing: I was watching something irrelevant thother night and a finer twist on a character in my almost finished screenplay  popped up.  So you see it wasn’t wasted time.  So maybe something will pop up from today’s  extravagant expenditure of it.

I’ll work tomorrow.

 

a blog in time

It's a good day for more words:

macrophage  noun Physiology a large phagocytic cell found in stationary form in the tissues or as a mobile white blood cell, especially at sites of infection.

 irredentist  noun [ usu. as modifier ] a person advocating the restoration to their country of any territory formerly belonging to it. • historical (in 19th-century Italian politics) an advocate of the return to Italy of all Italian-speaking districts subject to other countries. DERIVATIVES irredentism noun ORIGIN from Italian irredentista, from (Italia) irredenta ‘unredeemed (Italy)’.

 theodicy  noun (pl.theodicies) [ mass noun ] the vindication of divine providence in view of the existence of evil. the question of theodicy. [ count noun ] : those seeking a theodicy. DERIVATIVES theodicean |-ˈsiːən| adjective ORIGIN late 18th cent.: from French Théodicée, the title of a work by Leibniz, from Greek theos ‘god’ + dikē ‘justice’.

ME: Does theodicy help to answer the question: “Why do bad things happen  good people?”

 heuristic  adjective enabling a person to discover or learn something for themselves. a ‘hands-on’ or interactive heuristic approach to learning. • Computing proceeding to a solution by trial and error or by rules that are only loosely defined. noun a heuristic process or method. • (heuristics) [ usu. treated as sing. ] the study and use of heuristic techniques. DERIVATIVES heuristically adverb ORIGIN early 19th cent.: formed irregularly from Greek heuriskein ‘find’.

ME: Now, what is the difference between heuristic and empirical?

 empirical  adjective based on, concerned with, or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic: they provided considerable empirical evidence to support their argument. DERIVATIVES empirically adverb [ sentence adverb ] : empirically, the theory has a number of weaknesses

 orogeny  noun [ mass noun ] Geology a process in which a section of the earth's crust is folded and deformed by lateral compression to form a mountain range. present rates of denudation and orogeny. [ count noun ] : the Hercynian and Alpine orogenies. DERIVATIVES orogenesis noun orogenic, adjective

 kwashiorkor  noun [ mass noun ] a form of malnutrition caused by protein deficiency in the diet, typically affecting young children in the tropics. ORIGIN 1930s: a local word in Ghana.

 squamous adjective covered with or characterized by scales: a squamous black hide. • Anatomy relating to, consisting of, or denoting a layer of epithelium that consists of very thin flattened cells: squamous cell carcinoma. • [ attrib. ] Anatomy denoting the flat portion of the temporal bone which forms part of the side of the skull. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin squamosus, from squama ‘scale’.

 myopathy  noun (pl.myopathies) Medicine a disease of muscle tissue. DERIVATIVES myopathic adjective

 vapid  adjective offering nothing that is stimulating or challenging; bland: tuneful but vapid musical comedies. DERIVATIVES vapidity, noun, vapidly adverb ORIGIN mid 17th cent. (used originally in description of drinks as ‘lacking in flavour’): from Latin vapidus .

ME: I sort of knew this one but I’ve never used it. I will now. Compare it to this one that I’ve used a lot:

 insipid | adjective lacking flavour; weak or tasteless: mugs of insipid coffee. • lacking vigour or interest: many artists continued to churn out insipid, shallow works. DERIVATIVES insipidity |-ˈpɪdɪti| noun, insipidly adverb, insipidness noun ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from French insipide or late Latin insipidus, from in- ‘not’ + sapidus (see sapid) .

 umami  noun [ mass noun ] a category of taste in food (besides sweet, sour, salt, and bitter), corresponding to the flavour of glutamates, especially monosodium glutamate. ORIGIN Japanese, literally ‘deliciousness’.

ME:  I read that one a lot but haven’t used it yet.

 immiseration  noun [ mass noun ] economic impoverishment. rapid modernization had an impact on the level of urban immiseration. DERIVATIVES immiserate verb ORIGIN 1940s: translating German Verelendung .  epistemic | adjective relating to knowledge or to the degree of its validation. DERIVATIVES epistemically adverb ORIGIN 1920s: from Greek epistēmē ‘knowledge’ (see epistemology) + -ic.  

ME:That’s a good one.  I’ve used epistemology  but not epistemic.

 Künstlerroman A Künstlerroman (German pronunciation: [ˈkʏnstlɐ.ʁoˌmaːn]; plural -ane), meaning "artist's novel" in English, is a narrative about an artist's growth to maturity. It may be classified as a specific subgenre of Bildungsroman; such a work, usually a novel, tends to depict the conflicts of a sensitive youth against the values of a middle and upper class society of his or her time.

Examples in English:  

fetor (also foetor) noun a strong, foul smell: the fetor of decay ORIGIN late 15th cent.: from Latin, from fetere ‘to stink’. Compare with fetid.

casuist  noun 1 a person who uses clever but unsound reasoning, especially in relation to moral questions; a sophist. 2 a person who resolves moral problems by the application of theoretical rules. DERIVATIVES casuistic |-ˈɪstɪk| adjective, casuistical |-ˈɪstɪk(ə)l| adjective, casuistically |-ˈɪstɪk(ə)li| adverb ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from French casuiste, from Spanish casuista, from Latin casus (see case1) .  

ME: I’ve  used casuistry but never casuist.

 prolepsis  noun,  1 Rhetoric: the anticipation and answering of possible objections in rhetorical speech. 2 the representation of a thing as existing before it actually does or did so, as in he was a dead man when he entered. • literary a figurative device in narrative, in which a future event is prefigured. the destruction of the Vendôme Column and his part in it are foreshadowed in moments of haunting prolepsis. DERIVATIVES proleptic adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (as a term in rhetoric): via late Latin from Greek prolēpsis, from prolambanein ‘anticipate’, from pro ‘before’ + lambanein ‘take’.  

ME: Hey – “haunting prolepsis – I had thought it was a medical term but it’s delightfully not.

 exordium noun (pl.exordiums or exordia |-dɪə| ) formal the beginning or introductory part, especially of a discourse or treatise. DERIVATIVES exordial adjective ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from Latin, from exordiri ‘begin’, from ex- ‘out, from’ + ordiri ‘begin’.

 skeeve out :  his is not in the online Dictionary nor in Wikipedia.  I have a friend who says “hive out” when she’s digging into food and taking a lot.  Maybe skeeve out means the same thing. Any ideas?  

And that’s enough for today.