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Best word

   Discussion: Best word
Annika · 22 years, 1 month ago
I was talking about this the other day on the power wall and was met by total f-ing silence. So I'm going to post it here! I love the word slice. What a good word! Would you like a SLICE of pie? How about I SLICE this cheese? Slice. *sigh* I love the way that word sounds. Does everyone agree with me that is the best word, or do you have a favorite?
zil Back · 22 years, 1 month ago
idea... but I always think the i should be capitalized. Idea.
zil Back · 22 years, 1 month ago
this is if we are talking about words found in the dictionary... if we are talking any word in the history of man. including thoes made up on the spot in moments where no known word addicuitly covers it thats a different thing altogether man.
Annika Back · 22 years, 1 month ago
Umm.. wow, you took that further than I ever would have. But sure I guess if you want to go that far why not eh?
Annika Back · 22 years, 1 month ago
Before anyone says it, I know "Pete Best"
nate... Back · 22 years ago
Garbanzo!
angelmusicmaven Back · 22 years ago
www.homestarrunner.com go to the homestar talker in the games section and make him say "marshmallow."  It's our favorite word around the office right now...
nate... Back · 22 years ago
Huh... I shall have to check that out!
nate... Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
I think the best part is making him say "Marzipan it out!"
Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

Homestar

"ohhhhhhhhhh! discount brwick"

I also like how he says "Mars-ee-pan"

John J. Ryan Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Jeorb!
Back · 22 years ago
Yonks!
angelmusicmaven Back · 22 years ago
of course, when I'm in Toronto, my favorite word to hear the locals say is "out"... I don't giggle like other silly Americans, I soak it in... Murray has a really good "out," and don't take that the wrong way.  Heh.  I also like "BEEZLE!" 
Sarah Back · 22 years ago
I gotta ask, what does 'out' mean? Sarah
nate... Back · 22 years ago
Means the same thing, they just pronounce it "oot".
Sarah Back · 22 years ago
I've never heard that word used before in any of those contexts. What's it mean? Sarah
nate... Back · 22 years ago
What does "out" mean?
Kat Kunz Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
she's referring to the way murray says "out", not "out" as a euphemism for anything.  canadians use the word out the same way we do.  they just pronounce it funny.  :)  --k, who still finds the UN scene in the south park movie absolutely hysterical, no matter how many times she's seen it. 
nate... Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
Ahhh... gotcha.

And, yeah... the south park movie is one of the best comedies ever made. :)
Jillian Bird Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
we do not pronounce it "oot" .  i swear to God
nate... Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
Yes, you really do. :) Or, many people there do. Maybe it's a toronto hick thing.
Snow In Summer Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
i always heard it more of an "oat," sorta, but not quite rhyming w/ boat.  it's actually unlike any other sound i had heard to that point. 
A.J. Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Actually I don't think it is an entire Canada thing, but it certainly is an Ontario, or part of Ontario thing. Oot and aboot. I think it has something to do with the large population of people of scottish decent. Not so much now, but in the past where they had the chance to shape the dialect.

I started thinking of this after seeing Mike Ford do his show for the school children during frucon. He sang a song that went "turn them oot turn them oot, the Tories get the boot, we'll rise against the family compact and greatly turn them oot!" And he pronounced oot to rhyme exactly with boot--even MORE than present day Ontarians do it. So I think actually today's Ontario "out" is actually even a softening of a previous Scottish "oot".

FWIW French Canadians don't say "oot"
Mamalissa! Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

Ever heard a Nova Scotia accent?� You've got your bridge between Scottland and Ontario right there.� The "oots" abound.� Or should that be "aboond"?

My mother grew up both in Nova Scotia and the Bronx.� In her NYC high school, everyone had to take speech class.� The first day, my mom walked in, turned on her Cape Breton English, and was exempted from the class.�

danced with Lazlo Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Actually, I thought it was "turn aboot"
Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

yeah...

"hey Canadian! say� RUFF!"

"ummm..ok, ruff"

"no! say it in Canadian!"

"ummm..like a dog goes ruff ruff?"

"NO! RUFF! the top of a house!"

"OH! roof?"

"HAHAHAHAHAHAH!"

*groan*

nitsita Back · 22 years ago

in English -  Rutabega.

in French - caquelon (sort of saucepan where fondue is prepared) or crapule (villan... kinda).

in German - Schreibwarenladen (stationary store.. kinda)  and Programmiererinnen (female programmer, plural).  Or arbeitete (verb work. past tense)

in Innutittut - Amautik (the women's winter coat with an enormous hood in which to put a baby for it to stay warm.)

So sue me.  I know too many languages.

 

nate... Back · 22 years ago
Yeah! Rutabega is one of my favs. :)
nitsita Back · 22 years ago
Yeah I thinks I stoles it from you some time ago.
nate... Back · 22 years ago
That's allowed. :) I used to walk around high school with a pet rutabega. hehehe
Mamalissa! Back · 22 years ago
One day I'd like to rent a big Rutabega and drive across country with a bunch of folks.
A girl named Becca Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
I don't know....I'd vote Krankenpleger (nurse) or Schnupfen (is that cold, or sniffles?) in German.  :)  Though most of the words in the German language are pretty cool.
no one Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
Shnupfen is a cold, Schn�pfelchen are the sniffles. Verschnupft sounds cute, its an adjective describing someone afflicted by the cold, which does not feel cute. achoooh, sorry

and there is an f in the first word: Krankenpfleger
Laura P. Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
An Amautik sounds like a very useful garment. I'm very interested in this thing now. How does the baby stay in it?
Geoff Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Pants. PANTS. PAAAAAAAAAANTS!
emilie is CRANKY Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

or even, FUNKYPANTS! :D

ahem. yes. do carry on.

Bethany Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

Shrubbery.

And German DOES have some wonderful words.�

lawrence · 22 years ago
I like saying the word smock. smock smock smock.
Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

yeah...smock!

good word...always think of C&H when I hear that word.

so fun to say!

Sarah · 22 years ago
Total New England thing.. But that movie was wiked good. That pizza tasted wiked awesome. That was a wiked stupid comment you made. Sarah
Geoff Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Oh, you're wicked right. I say wicked a wicked lot.
emilie is CRANKY Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

and me! me me me! :D

except it's more like, 'wickeeeeeeeeed.' :D

hkath · 21 years, 11 months ago

Here it is....

.....

hinge.

Annika Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
Oooh! Hinge is a great word!
Rhi: so confused · 21 years, 11 months ago

English--snoggage.  or as my friends like to say, "Snog-agog."

Spanish-- "to bring" in imperfect: trabajaba.  I cannot say that without laughing.

 

Sarah Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
Trabajaba is an awesome word. Pretty much any AR verb in the imperfect in Spanish sound funny (endings: -aba, -abas, -aba, -amamos, -abais, -aban) Sarah
Annika Back · 21 years, 11 months ago
I'd never even thought of trabajaba as being funny.. but.. okay, I guess if you say it enough and try to figure out why it's funny, that makes you laugh because you realize your a dork that sits around trying to figure out why a word is funny to someone else. *sigh* I have a dull life.
Behnnie · 21 years, 8 months ago

Ever since - I mean... Hi, I'm new. Like the site. Anyways... Ever since watching "The Women", a 1950s flick about, well, women, I've been looking EVERYWHERE for the meaning of the word "beezle." It's tossed around a few times in the movie and I can get the gist of it from the contexts in which it is used, but I have no clue where it's from, what it really means- nothing.

And any vulgarity aside, I'd have to say one of my fave words must be "whore." It's just a very soft word all around. Just sort of falls out of your mouth unbidden. It's like breathing, but�with sound. The definition is the only unfortuante part of what is otherwise a purely delightful linguistic experience.

out like shout

angelmusicmaven Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

oh, Beezle is actually FROM something?� I had NO idea.� I've only heard it since my roommate named our "third roommate" Beezle.� Beezle in our house is a loofah that's supposed to be this happy spider or something, but the loofah part is yellow, so he looks kind of like a bee... anyway...

erm Back · 21 years, 8 months ago

You're a kindred soul. I, too, went on a maddening search for "beezle" after rewatching "The Women" the other day.

And I have tracked it down. Actually the word has a lot of meanings and associations. In the 20s it was slang for a nose. In Horton Hears a Who Dr. Seuss depicts the animals threatening to boil the Whos in beezle-nut oil. There is something called a beezle bug (no idea what kind of bug it is). It is an ordinary last name. And it even seems to be sometimes used in association with the devil as a warped version of "Beelzebub".

But in our case it is actually specific to the movie "The Women". I followed a trail to The Divas Site http://home2.planetinternet.be/verjans/index.htm, a nice fan site for a number of Hollywood divas, where the word was jokingly used in a tribute to Norma Shearer. I had to inquire then at the site what the word means, and I got this answer today: "Beezle" came about during the writing of the film's screenplay. Anita Loos and Jane Murfin couldn't have their characters say "bitch" or "whore," so they invented "beezle."

How about that? I hope this eases your mind as it did mine.

Behnnie Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Thank you thank you thank you!!! Consider my mind eased��
Rachel Beck Back · 21 years, 8 months ago
Egads! I've been looking for this, too, for exactly the same reason. I couldn't even find it in the OED, which is usually a comprehensive source for all things language-y.

As far as I can tell, it's an insult for a woman of lower or working class.

Anybody else who knows about this word, please frum me!

-Rachel

The movie "The Women," for anyone interested, is a George Cukor film from 1939.
data ARE · 21 years, 8 months ago
yellow
renita · 21 years, 8 months ago
guava...


oscillate...


precarious (I think it because it feels kinda of precarious in your mouth as you say it)

zil · 21 years, 8 months ago
spoon
ChrisChin is Getting Old · 21 years, 8 months ago
Prunt!
emilie is CRANKY · 21 years, 8 months ago

no-one's said 'dude' yet. :D

dooooooooood! :D

John J. Ryan · 21 years, 8 months ago
The made up curse word from Conan!

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