tomorrow already

frap verb (fraps, frapping, frapped) [ with obj. ] Nautical: bind (something) tightly. an attempt to frap the ship by passing cables under the hull. ORIGIN Middle English (in the sense ‘strike, beat’, now only dialect): from Old French fraper ‘to bind, strike’, of unknown origin. The current sense dates from the mid 16th century.

anther noun, Botany: the part of a stamen that contains the pollen. ORIGIN early 18th cent.: from French anthère or modern Latin anthera, from Greek anthēra ‘flowery’, from anthos ‘flower’.

panspermia noun [ mass noun ]: the theory that life on the earth originated from microorganisms or chemical precursors of life present in outer space and able to initiate life on reaching a suitable environment. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Greek, from panspermos ‘containing all kinds of seed’. [Is this what the Chinese had in mind when they planted something on the dark side of the moon? It died.)

conflate verb [ with obj. ]: combine (two or more sets of information, texts, ideas, etc.) into one: the urban crisis conflates a number of different economic, political, and social issues. DERIVATIVES: conflation .ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘fuse or melt down metal’): from Latin conflat- ‘kindled, fused’, from the verb conflare, from con- ‘together’ + flare ‘to blow’. [You see this one a lot now. Fancy.]

boffin nounBrit. informal: a person engaged in scientific or technical research: the boffins at the Telecommunications Research Establishment. • a person with knowledge or a skill considered to be complex or arcane: a computer boffin. DERIVATIVES boffiny adjective ORIGIN Second World War: of unknown origin. [I would love to be boffiny.]

hiragana noun [ mass noun ]: the more cursive form of kana (syllabic writing) used in Japanese, primarily used for function words and inflections. Compare with katakana. ORIGIN Japanese, ‘plain kana’. [I distinclty remember looking this one up before but I haven’t had any occasion to use it. It’s such a nice one.]

aposiopesis noun (pl.aposiopeses [ mass noun ] Rhetoric: the device of suddenly breaking off in speech. in coping with the unsaid and unsayable, oral history is impelled towards aposiopesis. DERIVATIVES aposiopetic adjective ORIGIN late 16th cent.: via Latin from Greek aposiōpēsis, from aposiōpan ‘be silent’.

There. Quit while I’m ahead. I started this entry three times and inadvertently deleted what I had written three times.

Ah well, there’s more where those came from.

Back to my screenplay.

next

Back to the screenplay. Read an annotated script my friend Marla returned to me with thorough nags and nitpicking for which I am very grateful, so now it’s perking and I’m thinking and I’ll have more to say/do tomorrow.