Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Joined
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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Thanks Vlad for the comment. I can fight my own battles, but sometime the blows are much softer when they come from a friend.<br />May I have another?
 

Vlad D Impeller

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

;) you're welcome :) <br /><br />BTW, Congrats on reaching 1000 posts :)
 
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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

I hadn't noticed but I'm sure there are plenty who have. Much to their chagrin. I am open on several fronts for those who want to add their swats.
 

JB

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

SWAT!! :D
 
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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Thank you sir, may I have another.
 

Kalian

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Confession is good for the soul, but beware the boy who cried wolf. I feel no need to swat, am I corect in assuming remorse implies reform?
 
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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Thank you sir, may I have another.<br />I hear by solomnly swear never to put type goof again..... Snapperbait is still holding those vowels - if you are still interested.
 

treedancer

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Im not going to swat you me thinks that you enjoy it to much. :D
 
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snapperbait

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

SWAT!....
smite.gif
<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />SWAT-SWAT!!....<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT.....<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-SWAT-!!!...<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />.<br />I think i'm beating a dead horse...
deadhorse.gif
 

bubbakat

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

LMAO at snapper :D :D
 

Haut Medoc

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Snapper, next time I'm in PSL, visiting my bestest buddy....I'm going to buy, cajole, missapropriate, kidnap, or steal them thar gremlins....I might be inclined to fish, too! :D Instant graemlins can't taste as good as the home-made ones, I just know it!... ;) ......JK
 

pjc

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

The Great Vowel Shift<br /> <br /><br />The main difference between Chaucer's language and our own is in the pronunciation of the "long" vowels. The consonants remain generally the same, though Chaucer rolled his r's, sometimes dropped his aitches, and pronounced both elements of consonant combinations, such as "kn," that were later simplified. And the short vowels are very similar in Middle and Modern English. But the "long" vowels are regularly and strikingly different. This is due to what is called The Great Vowel Shift.<br /><br />Beginning in the twelfth century and continuing until the eighteenth century (but with its main effects in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries) the sounds of the long stressed vowels in English changed their places of articulation (i.e., how the sounds are made).<br /><br />Old and Middle English were written in the Latin alphabet and the vowels were represented by the letters assigned to the sounds in Latin. For example, Middle English "long e" in Chaucer's "sheep" had the value of Latin "e" (and sounded like Modern English "shape" [/e/] in the International Phonetic Alphabet [IPA]). It had much the same value as written long e has in most modern European languages. Consequently, one can read Chaucer's long vowels with the same values as in Latin or any continental European language and come pretty close to the Middle English values. <br /><br />The Great Vowels Shift changed all that; by the end of the sixteenth century the "e" in "sheep" sounded like that in Modern English "sheep" or "meet" [IPA /i/]. To many it seemed that the pronunciation of English had moved so far from its visual representation that a new alphabet was needed, and in the sixteenth century we have the first attempts to "reform" English spellings, a movement still active today. In 1569 John Hart (in his Orthographie) went so far as to devise a new phonetic alphabet to remedy what he considered a fatal flaw in our system of language. (His alphabet and the work of other language reformers provides us with our best evidence for the pronunciation of English in his time). <br /><br />To understand how English changed (not why; no one knows) one must first note that vowels are articulated in particular parts of the mouth; we make the sound in Modern English "deep" [/dip/] with our tongue forward and high in the mouthr, and the sound in Modern Enlish "boat" [/bot/] with our tongue lowered and drawn toward the back of the mouth and the jaw relatively low (open). Say "ee" (or "beet") and "o" (or "boat") in succession and you may be able to feel the movement of your tongue from front to back. <br /><br />Note that the change affects only long, stressed vowels. The "y" in Middle Enghlish "my" was affected because it has primary stress, and we say /mai/; the "y" in a word like "only" was not affected (the primary stress is on the first syllable and -ly lacks stress, so we say /li:/, making the -ly of "only" rime with "see."<br /><br />The change is not as neat as is shown; /æ:/ ("open e," as it is called in most discussions) did not complete the movement from /æ:/ to /e:/ to /i:/ (contrast Mod. Eng. "break" and "beak"). Moreover, when Middle English "e" represents /æ:/ and when the spelling "o" or "oo" represents the open vowel often can be determined only by the etymology of the words. Modern spellings offer a clue: as a general rule, where modern English uses "ea" (as in "read") or "oa" (as in loaf), the Middle English equivalent was the open vowel sound. ("Open" and "close" or "closed" refer to the jaw -- lowered for "open" and raised for "close" vowels.) <br /><br />Vowel Take Home Card<br /><br />Te tetted e tettetett tettet? Te tettetett tettek tettese, te! <br />Did you do this pretended act? You, doer of pretended acts, you!<br /><br />Öt török öt görögöt dögönyöz örökös örömök között. <br />Five Turks are massaging five Greeks amid everlasting delights. <br /><br />funny vowel stuff hey? :)
 

pjc

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Egy picike pocakú picike pocok pocakon pöckölt egy picike pocakú picike pockot, mire a pocakon pöckölt, picike pocakú pocok pocakon pöckölte az őt pocakon pöckölő, picike pocakú pockot. <br />A tiny vole with a tiny tummy flipped a tiny vole with a tiny tummy on the tummy, when the vole with a tiny tummy flipped on the tummy flipped the vole with a tiny tummy on the tummy who flipped him on the tummy. <br /><br />post count ya der hey
 

pjc

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Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Word Fun for Web-footed Verbivores<br /><br />VOWELS<br />Seven-letter words with the five vowels in any order are SEQUOIA, EULOGIA, EUNOIA (alertness of mind and will), MIAOUED, ADOULIE, EUCOSIA, EUNOMIA, EUTOPIA, MOINEAU, DOULEIA (an alternate spelling of DULIA which appears in W2), and EUODIAS (a name in Philippians 4:2). Allowing scientific names in biology, IOUEA is a genus of Cretaceous fossil sponges. In French, OISEAU (bird) is the shortest word with the five vowels. BOIEAU is a town in Belgium. POAEUI Passage is in Papua New Guinea [Philip Bennett, Susan Thorpe, Stuart Kidd, Rex Gooch]. <br />EUNOIA is the title of a book by Canadian poet Christian Bok which contains a series of univocalic prose poems. The first 20 or so poems use only the letter A, the next 20 use only E, and so on through I, O, and U. The book claims that eunoia means "beautiful thinking" and that it is shortest word using all five vowels. However, the word does not appear in English language dictionaries. Eunoia is the transliteration of a Greek word used by Aristotle and found in the New Testament which is translated "good will," or "benevolence," or "kindness." [Andreas Parsch, Philip Bennett, James A. Landau]. <br /><br />Eight-letter words with the five vowels in any order are AEQUORIN, AEROBIUM, AGOUTIES, DIALOGUE, EDACIOUS, EQUATION, EULOGIAS, EUPHORIA, EUSOCIAL, EXONUMIA, JALOUSIE, OUTRAISE, SAUTOIRE, SEQUOIAS, and THIOUREA [Philip Bennett, Charles Turner]. <br /><br />The shortest words with containing the six vowels in any order are IALOUSYE, EURYOPIA, EYDOUXIA, EURYOMIA, EUMYOBIA, and JOYEUXIA [Stuart Kidd]. Some nine-letter words with this property are OXYURIDAE (pinworms), and OXYGEUSIA (abnormal sensitivity to taste) [Chris Cole, K. K. S. Bisht]. Some ten-letter words with this property are ANEUPLOIDY, AUDIOMETRY, AUTOTYPIES, BUOYANCIES, COEQUALITY, EUKARYOTIC, and OXYURIASES [Philip Bennett]. <br /><br />The shortest word with the five vowels in alphabetical order is AERIOUS (7 letters), meaning "airy." The OED2 shows one use of this word with this spelling in 1657. Other words with the five vowels occurring once each and in alphabetical order are: ABSTEINOUS, ABSTEMIOUS, ABSTENIOUS, ABSTENTIOUS, ACERIFLORUM, ACERIFLORUS, ACHEILOUS, ACHEIROUS, ACLEISTOUS, ADECTICOUS which is not in the OED2 but which web pages show is an adjective which describes a pupa with non-functional mandibles, ADVENTIOUS, AFFECTIOUS, ALEIKOUM, ALPESTRIOUS, ANEMIOUS, ANNELIDOUS, ARSENIOUS, ARTERIOSUM, ARTERIOSUS, ARTERIOUS, AVENIOUS, BACTERIOUS, CAESIOUS, CAMELIOUS, CARNELIOUS, FACETIOUS, FRACEDINOUS, GAREISOUN, GRAVEDINOUS, MAJESTIOUS, MATERIOUS, PARECIOUS, PLACENTIOUS, TRAGEDIOUS [Philip Bennett, Stuart Kidd, Paul Browning]. <br /><br />The longest word with the five vowels in alphabetical order is PHRAGELLIORHYNCHUS (a protozoan) [Susan Thorpe]. <br /><br />The shortest with the six vowels in alphabetical order is HAREIOUSLY (cruelly), which the OED2 shows in a single citation from a 15th-century manuscript [Susan Thorpe]. <br /><br />Pierre Abbat says ACEITOU (Portuguese for past tense of to accept) and ALEIJOU (Portuguese for past tense of paralyze) are the shortest words he knows in any language written in the Roman alphabet which have all five vowels in order. <br /><br />The longest word containing all six vowels, with each vowel occurring only once, is ANTISTREPHORRHYNCHUS (an extinct crustacean) [Susan Thorpe]. Other long words are HYDROMETALLURGISTS and NONUNDERSTANDINGLY [Stuart Kidd]. The longest words containing the six vowels in alphabetical order, each occurring only once, are ABSTENTIOUSLY and MARVEILLOUSLY (variant of marvellously) [Susan Thorpe]. <br /><br />A species of louse, Haemodipsus lyriocephalus, has all the vowels once in each name [Stuart Kidd]. <br /><br />The longest words containing the five vowels in alphabetical order are SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALIDOCIOUS (34) and PANCREATICODUODENOSTOMIES (25) [Stuart Kidd]. <br /><br />According to Philip Bennett, the longest words containing the six vowels in alphabetical order are PANCREATICODUODENOSTOMY and PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY (in the Merriam-Webster Medical Dictionary). <br /><br />ULTRAREVOLUTIONARIES has each vowel exactly twice. The shortest such word is CUBOIDEONAVICULARE (Ligamentum cuboideonaviculare), and the longest, USSOLZEWIECHINOGAMMARUS (a small crustacean) [Susan Thorpe]. PSEUDOPSEUDOHYPOPARATHYROIDISM (which is in OED2) has each vowel at least twice. <br /><br />OUENOUAOU (a stream in the Philippines) has vowels for 8 of its 9 letters and may be the longest place name with one consonant. PUNAAUIA (a village in Tahiti) has vowels for 6 of its 8 letters [Juozas Rimas]. OUABAIO (an African tree) has vowels for 6 of its 7 letters [Stuart Kidd]. OGOOUE (an African river) has vowels for 5 of its 6 letters. <br /><br />SUOIDEA (the taxonomic group to which pigs belong) is the shortest word with the five vowels in reverse alphabetical order [Dmitri Borgmann]. The longest such word is PUNCTOSCHMIDTELLA (a crustacean) [Susan Thorpe, Stuart Kidd]. Other words with this property are DUOLITERAL, PRUNOIDEA (a suborder of radiolarian protozoa -OED), JULOIDEA, MUROIDEA (the mice-like rodent family), MUSCOIDEA (the family of two-winged flies), PULMONIFERA, RUDOIERA, SUBCONTINENTAL, SUBHYOIDEAN (beneath the hyoid bone), SUBPOPLITEAL, SUBVOICEBAND, QUODLIBETAL (of an issue that is presented for formal disputation), QUODLIBETARY (a quodlibetical argument), TUTOIERA, UNCOMPLIMENTARY, UNCONSIDERABLY, UNCONTINENTAL, UNCONVINCEABLY, UNNOTICEABLY, UNOBLITERABLY, UNOCCIDENTAL, UNORIENTAL, UNPOLICEMANLY, and UNPROPRIETARY [Philip C. Bennett, Charles Turner, Stuart Kidd, Paul Browning]. <br /><br />Words consisting entirely of vowels include AA (a type of lava), IAO, OII, EUOUAE, OO, I, O, A, and IO, which is an interjection in Chambers in addition to being one of the moons of Jupiter. All-vowel words in the OSPD3 are AA, AE, AI, EAU, OE. OO means "wool" (Scottish). The OED has the interjection AIEEE. AI is the three-toed sloth in Chambers and a Biblical place name and a Russian river. Other words consisting only of vowels are UOIAUAI (the name of a language in Par´ State, Brazil) [Dmitri Borgmann, in Charles Bombaugh's Oddities and Curiosities of Words and Literature, ed. Martin Gardner). The Samoan word UAEA means "wire" and is actually the English word spelled phonetically [Rémy Viredaz]. AIOUEA is a genus of the laurel famliy (Lauracea) [Charles Turner]. The scientific name of the roseate spoonbill is AJAIA AJAIA (or AJAIA AJAJA); however, the J's would have been I's in the original Latin spelling, so that the words would consist entirely of vowels also. <br /><br />Audubon L. Bakewell IV provided a list of some all-vowel Hawaiian names for birds which are used in English: AO - Puffinus puffinus (Manx shearwater), UAU - Pterodroma phaeopygia (Dark-rumped Shearwater), OEOE - Oceanodroma castro (Harcourt's Storm-petrel), IO - Buteo solitarius (Hawaiian Hawk), OOAA - Moho bracatus, OU - Psittirostra psittacea. <br /><br />Allowing proper nouns, some words consisting only of vowels include AIEA (a city in Hawaii), EIAO (one of the Marquesas Islands), EA (a town in the Basque section of Spain), AEAEA (the legendary home of Circe in the Tyrrhenian Sea), AAUAUA (a river in Brasil), II (a place in Finland 40 km north of Oulu), and OUEOI (an ancient Tuscan city in Etruria). IO is the only name on any hurricane name list which consists entirely of vowels. It is on the Central Pacific hurricane name list [Brett Brunner, Juozas Rimas, Stuart Kidd, Pertti Malo]. Dmitri Borgmann gives OEAEI (the name of the wife of Ra-amen, the spondist of Pthah) [An Archaic Dictionary, From the Egyptian, Assyrian, and Etruscan Monuments and Papyri, by William R. Cooper, London, 1876]. OUADI EL AOUAOUIYE is a location in Syria, AOUEOUA in Mauritania, and AOUEOUE in Togo [Rex Gooch]. <br /><br />Allowing Y as a vowel, some words consisting only of vowels include AYE, AYU, EYE, IYO, EYEY, and YAYA (although I am not sure which of these Y's are vowels!). <br /><br />CWM (a glacial hollow on a hillside) has the rare W as a vowel, as does CRWTH (a type of stringed instrument). Both words are in MWCD10. They are pronounced "koom" and "krooth" (rhyming with room and truth). Other such words, not in MWCD10, are TWP (stupid), AWDL (an ode written in the strict alliterative meters), and LLWCHWR (a city-district in Wales). These words are of Welsh origin. The OED includes numerous archaic spellings in which W or V is a vowel. <br /><br />Words containing no vowels include Q.T. (as in "on the q.t.") and DJ, both of which appear in the main part of MWCD10 and not in the abbreviations section. Other such words include BRRR, GRR, HMMMM, JHVH, MR., MRS., MS, NTH, PFFT, pH PHPHT, PHT, PSST, SH, SHH, SSSHHHHH, TSK, TSKS, TSKTSK, TSKTSKS, TV, YHWH, ZZZ, HSH (hush, W3), ST (silence, quiet, W3), TCH (vexation or disgust, W3), TCK (surprise or displeasure), and TST (hissed sound enjoining silence, W3). PHFFFT! and SSSSSSS are titles of movies from 1954 and 1973. The OED has TPRW (the sound of a horn). GRRL is in the Macquarie Dictionary, with the alternate spelling GRRRL [Charles Turner]. <br /><br />KRK is a Croatian island [Juozas Rimas]. <br /><br />Richard VLK of Pittsburgh profited from a vowelless last name in 1983 when he won over $20,000 by finding enough flip tops from Pepsi cans to spell his name 1,393 times. <br /><br />William P. MLKVY played basketball for Temple University. He is referred to as the "Owl Without a Vowel," although the Y in his name is a vowel. <br /><br />A banner held up at a baseball game read, "Hrbek, buy a vowel!" It referred to Kent HRBEK of the Minnesota Twins. <br /><br />Strc prst skrz krk (Czech for "Put your finger through your throat") appears to have no vowels, but R serves as a vowel in Czech. Bydd y cyllyll yn y cwpwrdd wrth y bwrdd (Welsh for "The knives will be in the cupboard by the table") does not use the vowels a, e, i, o, and u. <br /><br />The longest common word without an A, E, I, O, or U is RHYTHMS, but these additional words appear in W2: SYMPHYSY, NYMPHLY, GYPSYRY, GYPSYFY. The OED2 has TWYNDYLLYNG(S). And WPPWRMWSTE (in the OED) goes nine letters without an A, E, I, O, or U; GLYCYRRHIZIN (a constituent of licorice) goes eight letters without A, E, I, O, or U. (In all these words, "Y" is a vowel.) <br /><br />The longest word in dictionaries having only one vowel is STRENGTHS. <br /><br />PSYCHORHYTHMS (W2) is the longest word with only one vowel, ignoring Y [Stuart Kidd]. <br /><br />Some long common German words with only one vowel are SCHRUMPFST (you shrink; 10 letters), SCHRUMPFT (he shrinks; 9 letters), SCHWIMMST (you swim, informal, 9 letters) SCHWIMMT (he/she/it swims 8 letters), STRUMPF (stocking, 7 letters) [Gerd Baron, Robbie Ellis]. <br /><br />Some long words with only one vowel which is allowed to repeat are: TATHAGATAGARBHA, TARAMASALATAS, HANDCRAFTSMAN, STRENGTHLESSNESSES, DEFENSELESSNESSES, EFFERVESCENCE, RETELEMETERED, DEGENERESCENCE, BEEKEEPER, and perhaps EYELETEERS, which is in OSW but I am unsure whether the Y is a vowel), INSTINCTIVISTIC, DISINHIBITING, KINNIKINNICKS, PHILISTINISMS, PRIMITIVISTIC, WHIPSTITCHING, MISSISSIPPI, LOXOLOPHODONTS, MONOPHTHONGS, POSTWORKSHOP, OCONOMOWOC (a town in Wisconsin), STRULDBRUGS, CURUCUCUS, DUMBSTRUCK, UNTRUTHFUL, NUMBSKULLS, MUNDUNGUS, USUFRUCT, SUSURRUS, SUCCUBUS, GLYCYLS, RHYTHMS. In addition CHRONONHOTONTHOLOGOS (in Roget’s Thesaurus, at "blusterer"), the title and hero of a 1734 burlesque tragedy by Henry Carey, is used for "anyone who delivers an inflated address" (Brewer's Phrase and Fable). In his book Language on Vacation, Dmitri Borgmann calls these words univocalics and lists SYMPHYSY as the longest Y-univocalic [Marc Broering, Dan Tilque, Stuart Kidd, Philip Bennett]. <br /><br />Words with the most consecutive vowels (six) include EUOUAE, which W2 defines as "A word formed from the vowels of seculorum amen, ending the Gloria Patri," and AIOUEA (a genus of plants of the laurel family). <br /><br />Words with five consecutive vowels include QUEUEING (used in the mathematics term "queueing theory"), the interjection AIEEE, which is in the OED, and COOEEING. (COOEE or COOEY, a peculiar cry of the Australian aborigine, is in W1, W2, and W3. The word is also a verb and both W1 and W2 show the forms COOEEING and COOEEYING.) The OED2 has COUUIENALES, which is a variant of quienals, which comes from quiennal, meaning "dispensation or indulgence for five years." Other such words are MIEAOU (OED) and MIAOUED and MIAOUING (what a cat does; OSPD and Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 5th edition), ZAOUIA (an alternate spelling of zawiya according to the OED2 - Jeremy Marshall), JUSSIEUEAN ("pertaining to the natural system of botanical classification devised by Bernard de Jussieu and his nephew Antoine Laurent de Jussie" [W3]) and ZOOEAE (larvae of crabs and relatives [Chris Cole]) or ZOAEAE [OED]. The Kaula (Pteralyxia kauaiensis) and the Holei (Ochrosia kilaueaensis) are endangered Hawaiian plants, and the Formosan Sika (Cervus nippon taiouanus) is an endangered Taiwanese deer. MIOEUOTICUS is a fossil primate genus [Charles Turner, Philip Bennett]. <br /><br />The entomologist A. A. Girault named a group of tiny wasps for writers, scientists, statesmen, and philosophers (Shakespearia, Beethovena, Goetheana, Marxella, etc.). He named a wasp genus THOREAUIA for Henry David Thoreau. This word has five consecutive vowels [Charles Turner]. <br /><br />Some words with four consecutive vowels follow (although in some cases the Y may not be a vowel): aqueous, ballyhooey, bayou, biyearly, buoyance, buoyancy, buoyant, buoyed, buoying, clayey, dequeue, dequeuing, employee, enqueue, eyeing, flooey, gooey, guaiacum, Hawaiian, hooey, joyous, kayoed, kayoing, layout, layouts, maieutic, obloquious, obsequious, onomatopoeia, palaeoanthropic, Paraguayan, payee, pharmacopoeia, prosopopoeia, Quaoar (a term in the creation mythology of the Tongva people and a Kuiper Belt object discovered in 2002), quayage, queue, radioautograph, reliquiae, royaux, Rubaiyat, semiyearly, Sequoia, subaqueous, terraqueous, voodooienne, voyeur, Yaounde [Nelson H. F. Beebe, Charles Turner, Paul Wright]. <br /><br />Craig Rowland reports that in Quebec, there is a region known as the Outaouais, which, if in adjectival form, becomes lowercase, hence outaouais. The feminine form of this adjective is OUTAOUAISE, making it an eight-vowelled ten-letter word. He also says that in Quebecois French, the word for bullfrog is OUAOUARON, with six vowels in a row. <br /><br />The Hawaiian word HOOIAIOIA (meaning "certified") has eight consecutive vowels and is listed in the 1976 Guinness Book of World Records [Charles Turner]. <br /><br />Allowing proper nouns, CAUAIAUAIA in Angola has nine vowels in a row, as does URU-EU-UAU-UAU (a language of Brazil with about 100 speakers in 1995; also spelled URUEWAWAU or ERU-EU-WAU-WAU), ignoring hyphens and OUADI EL AOUAOUIYE, in Syria [Susan Thorpe, Rex Gooch]. <br /><br />Allowing proper nouns, IJOUAOUOUENE, a mountain in Morocco, has 8 consecutive vowels as rendered by the French [Guinness]. Also with 8 consecutive vowels are the Bled El HAOUAOUIA area and OUAOUIOUST hill (both in Morocco), AGUINAOUIAOUI in Mali, and ISSOUOUAOUAR in Niger [Susan Thorpe]. In Estonian, OUEAIAAARE means "edge of a fence surrounding a yard" [Juozas Rimas]. <br /><br />OUAOUIATON appears on a French map of the central part of North America printed in 1693, and has 7 consecutive vowels. The word was later shortened to OUAOUIA, and was applied to the Indian tribe subsequently called Iowa. [The Book of Names, J. N. Hook.] Other place names with 7 vowels in a row include AOUEOUA, (Mauritania), AOUEOUE, Togo, BOUAAOUAM (Algeria), TIOUOOUORT (Mali), and ES ZOUAOUIINE and TAZOUOUOUARHT (Morocco) [Susan Thorpe, Rex Gooch]. <br /><br />OIOUEAE is one of the tropes or Gregorian formulas for the close of the lesser doxology in church music, representing the vowels in "World without end, Amen." [Music Lovers’ Encyclopedia (1954), by Rupert Hughes] <br /><br />The ZOUAOUA are a Kabyli tribe living in Algeria and Morocco. UAIEUE (variants: UAIUAI, WAIWAI or OUAYEONE) is a language of Brazil indians. AAUAUA is a river in Brasil. These words have 6 consecutive vowels [Juozas Rimas]. Also with six consecutive vowels is INOEIOIO in Mozambique [Susan Thorpe]. <br /><br />In Dutch, KOEIEUIER (the udder of a cow) and PAPEGAAIEËIEREN (parrot eggs) have seven consecutive vowels, although they are no longer valid spellings, having been replaced by KOEIENUIER and PAPEGAAIENEIEREN [Joost Gestel, Tom Vernooij, John Slegers]. <br /><br />The Dutch word ZAAIUIEN (onions for seeding) has 6 consecutive vowels, still valid in the new spelling since 1995, although this is not found in the Van Dale dictionary [Oscar van Vlijmen]. <br /><br />HAAYOAIE, a Finnish word for "a plan for the wedding night," has 7 consecutive vowels, and 6 of the 8 vowel sounds that exist in Finnish (there is an umlaut above the first two A's and the O). [Tapio Tallgren]. <br /><br />In Spanish, REHUÍAOS has all five vowels pronounced, as the "H" is silent. It is a form of the verb rehuir (to avoid) and means "I/he/she/it avoided you" [Ignacio Fernández Galván]. <br /><br />In Hungarian, fiaiéi ("those belonging to his/her sons") has five vowels (and five syllables) and only one consonant [Ádám Szegi]. <br /><br />Gary Rosenberg suggests that QUACKSALVER and QUICKSILVER may be the longest pair of words related by changing two identical vowels to a different set of identical vowels.
 

pjc

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
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Messages
1,856
Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

Happy Thanksgiving ALL !<br /><br />• gobble •<br />Printable Version Pronunciation: gah-bêl • <br />Part of Speech: Verb<br />Meaning: 1. [Transitive] To eat very fast, voraciously, as to gobble up her food. 2. [Intransitive] To make the sound of a turkey.<br />Notes: Welcome to alphaDictionary's Thanksgiving Day Sale: two Good Words for the price of one! The turkey, that Thanksgiving staple of carnivores, only accidentally makes a sound resembling the word meaning "to devour" (see Word History). Both words have only native English forms: gobbling is either activity and a gobbler is man or bird that undertakes either type of gobbling.<br />In Play: We held this word back to the season when gobbler-gobblers gobble (recently) gobbling gobblers: "Don't gobble that gobbler, Junior, it might accelerate your growth." (I suspect that these are more examples than anyone needs, so let me get back to the Thanksgiving table.)<br />Word History: Frequentative of Middle English gobben "to drink greedily", probably from gobbe "lump, mouthful" (gob today). Middle English probably borrowed the word from Old French gobe "mouthful", from gober "to gulp", of Celtic origin. The turkey's gobble gets its name, of course, from the sound that the turkey makes (onomatopoeia). Gobbledegook is a contribution of Representative Maury Maverick, whose grandfather gave us the word maverick. Rep. Maverick based the word gobbledygook on the behavior of turkeys back in Texas. According to him, they were "…always gobbledy-gobbling and strutting with ludicrous pomposity. At the end of this gobble there was a sort of gook."<br /><br /> :) :) :) :) ;)
 

pjc

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Jun 29, 2003
Messages
1,856
Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

BTW, techno, have a Great Thanksgiving. <br /><br />Your posts though viewed initialy by me as provocative, or provoking, and actually to a degree (slight @ this point, WTHCs) do add another flavor to this Iboats WebWorld for those of the persuasion such as yourselfs. Gobble, Gobble.
 

lark2004

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Jul 12, 2004
Messages
1,080
Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

I think techno.... you enjoy this too much, <br /><br />No,<br /><br />I will not hit you,<br /><br />I still don't like you very much, but i'm not going to endulge you by beating the crap out of you.
 

LadyFish

Admiral
Joined
Mar 18, 2003
Messages
6,894
Re: Good, Good for the soul OK boys lay it on I have it coming....

I think what we need here is a swat team.
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