<div dir="auto"><i><span style="color:rgb(49,49,49);word-spacing:1px">Elliott: Moss? Does that even grow in New Mexico, or is the climate too </span><br style="color:rgb(49,49,49);word-spacing:1px"><span style="color:rgb(49,49,49);word-spacing:1px">arid for moss?</span></i><br></div><div dir="auto"><span style="color:rgb(49,49,49);word-spacing:1px"><br></span></div><div dir="auto"><span style="color:rgb(49,49,49);word-spacing:1px">Well, having just been in highly arid Utah, there was moss growing on some rocks in round little lumps maybe 2-3 cm across. But not very widespread, no.</span></div><div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Sat, Oct 23, 2021 at 8:38 PM E Cohen <<a href="mailto:eac@inbox.com">eac@inbox.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">Congratulations to Jim's elephant trail, whose 14 points ran away with <br>
the prize! Nicolas' salt deposits came in next with a solid eight <br>
points, and I am pleased to note that the true definition received only <br>
one point.<br>
<br>
Thank you all for such a full and varied ballot.<br>
<br>
Take it away, Jim!<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
General comments<br>
<br>
Ranjit: It feels funny to give my votes to the first two defs in the <br>
list - would I have chosen differently if I'd read them in a different <br>
order? These are all quite good!<br>
<br>
Jean-Joseph: OK, often it's best to go with the least intriguing <br>
possibilities: two points for the elephant trail and one for the salt <br>
deposits.<br>
<br>
Elliott: None of these are the least bit plausible.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Real definition<br>
<br>
surra, n. A disease of some mammals, characterized by loss of appetite, <br>
weight loss, fever, and salivation. It is acute and generally fatal in <br>
horses, donkeys, mules, cattle, buffalo, deer, camels, llamas, dogs, and <br>
cats; a chronic form of the disease occurs in pigs, sheep, and goats.<br>
<br>
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surra" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surra</a><br>
<br>
1 Pierre<br>
<br>
Pierre: One point, though the sets of animals sound taxonomically <br>
implausible.<br>
<br>
Pierre: Looking it up afterward, I sighted a ked. Trypanosoma <br>
melophagium (I'd expect "melophagi" or "melophagorum") is transmitted by <br>
keds.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Pierre<br>
<br>
surra, n. A wind-eroded mass of rock resembling the sail of a submarine.<br>
<br>
4: 2 Ranjit, 1 Elizabeth, 1 real vote<br>
<br>
Ziv: Resembling the what now?<br>
<br>
Ranjit: 2 points and i had to check if submarines really have sails, and <br>
they do, and now i can visualize just what this rock would look like.<br>
<br>
Hutch: Geological, or topological, words tend to be older than submarines.<br>
<br>
Elliott: Now I'm picturing a seventeenth-century pirate submarine, which <br>
sneaks up on its prey completely submerged except for three masts hung <br>
with black sails and a Jolly Roger. "<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Jean-Joseph<br>
<br>
surra,conj. (obs.) Subsequently; and then.<br>
<br>
2: 1 Ranjit, 1 Jim<br>
<br>
Ranjit: 1 point for the audacity of conjunction<br>
<br>
Jim: 1 point for the chutzpah of making it a conjunction."<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Linda<br>
<br>
surra, n. A soft humming sound.<br>
<br>
3: 2 Nicolas, 1 Elliott<br>
<br>
Ziv: Someone inspired by susurrus, maybe?<br>
<br>
Pierre: Susurrus.<br>
<br>
Hutch: Someone is trying to pull "sussuration" out here.<br>
<br>
Nicolas: 2 points on susurrate grounds.<br>
<br>
Elliott: Plausible because of ``susurration'' ... but of course, that's <br>
just what they want us to think. One point.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Elliott<br>
<br>
surra, n. A failure mode of early swivel chairs, occurring when the <br>
center of mass of the occupied chair lies so far off the swivel axis <br>
that the chair topples when swivelled.<br>
<br>
Hutch: Funny, but no.<br>
<br>
Nicolas: Harry the Handsome Executive, is that you?<br>
<br>
Eric: Is that the game where you shoot a staple gun?<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
David<br>
<br>
surra, n. (fr. Warlpiri) Stewed termites.<br>
<br>
Ziv: Almost want to give one point for Warlpiri, but there's too many <br>
great definitions this round.<br>
<br>
Hutch: The two food definitions are too similar to be believed. Not that <br>
the foods are similar.<br>
<br>
Elliott: Australian languages aren't big on fricatives, so I'm guessing no.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Elizabeth<br>
<br>
surra, n. A filled, flaky, Moroccan pastry, containing soft-cooked egg.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Ranjit<br>
<br>
surra, n. A picnic with lots of time and wine<br>
<br>
Hutch: I don't believe this definition in the slightest, but there <br>
certainly does need to be a word for such a picnic. I've always thought <br>
of it as a "Hash House Harriers Trail" ... as long as you include beer <br>
along with the wine.<br>
<br>
Elliott: ``If I, could save time, in a bottle ...''<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Hutch<br>
<br>
surra, n. A camelid closely related to llama, alpaca, guanaco, and <br>
vicuña; markedly larger than the llama (approx. size of a horse). Like <br>
the llama, they were associated with an Aymar deity, but that deity went <br>
out of favor when its priests failed to predict the coming of Europeans <br>
to the Andes. Breeding decreased radically during Spanish rule and it is <br>
unknown whether any remain alive today.<br>
<br>
Pierre: Is this the grass mud horse?<br>
<br>
Nicolas: I want there to be a secret llama.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Fran<br>
<br>
surra, n. A viscous slurry of water, clay, moss, and dye used to <br>
decorate adobe walls, resulting in colored patterns that become <br>
permanent moss patterns. v.To decorate a wall with a slurry of water, <br>
clay, moss, and dye, typically in geometric patterns.<br>
<br>
1 Ziv<br>
<br>
Ziv: One "I want this to be real" point<br>
<br>
Pierre: Tossup between this and the disease.<br>
<br>
Elliott: Moss? Does that even grow in New Mexico, or is the climate too <br>
arid for moss?<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Ziv<br>
<br>
surra, interj. A command for banishing demons. v. To banish demons with <br>
the command "surra."<br>
<br>
1 Fran<br>
<br>
Elliott: I've always had good luck with ``kill -9'', but I'll be sure to <br>
try ``surra'' next time the need arises.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Jim<br>
<br>
surra, n. A broad trail created by elephants.<br>
<br>
14: 2 David, 2 Ziv, 2 Jean-Joseph, 2 Pierre, 1 Hutch, 1 Nicolas, 2 Fran, <br>
2 Elliott<br>
<br>
Hutch: There's bound to be a word for this. Why not "surra"? 1 point<br>
<br>
Nicolas: 1 point. Seems like this might have a name.<br>
<br>
Elliott: I like it. Is that thing where they hold each other's tail in <br>
single file for real, or just in kids' books? Two points.<br>
<br>
--------<br>
<br>
Nicolas<br>
<br>
surra, n. Salt deposits remaining after a body of water evaporates.<br>
<br>
8: 1 David, 1 Jean-Joseph, 2 Jim, 2 Hutch, 2 Elizabeth<br>
<br>
Pierre: Chott award.<br>
<br>
Jim: 2 points since I’m a sucker for geology definitions (although the <br>
one about the sail on a submarine was too specific for me to believe).<br>
<br>
Hutch: 2 points. Believable<br>
<br>
Elliott: Maybe suggested by similarity to SLURRY?"<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
-- Eric | @GoudyBoldItalic<br>
<br>
<br>
</blockquote></div></div>-- <br><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_signature" data-smartmail="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><div><div dir="ltr"><div><div dir="ltr"><div style="font-family:arial;font-size:small"><i>Fran Poodry (she/her)</i></div><div style="font-family:arial;font-size:small"><i>Oregon, USA</i></div><div style="font-family:arial;font-size:small"><i><br></i></div><div style="font-size:small"><i><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><span style="color:rgb(24,24,24);font-size:14px;line-height:18px">“Children must be taught how to think, not what to think.” </span><br style="color:rgb(24,24,24);font-size:14px;line-height:18px"><span style="color:rgb(24,24,24);font-size:14px;line-height:18px">― </span><a href="http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/61107.Margaret_Mead" style="color:rgb(102,102,0);text-decoration:none;font-size:14px;line-height:18px" target="_blank">Margaret Mead</a></font><br></i></div></div></div></div></div></div></div>