<div dir="ltr"><div>oops, I forgot to include Fran's 2 points for guessing correctly, giving a total of 3!</div><div><br></div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Wed, Feb 2, 2022 at 9:35 PM Ranjit Bhatnagar <<a href="mailto:ranjit@moonmilk.com">ranjit@moonmilk.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex"><div dir="ltr"><div>The ballots are in and the results are out! The winner by far: Eric's port varnish, with 7 points! <br></div><div><br></div><div>Runners-up: Pierre's hole in the cathead with 4, and the real definition, "to look askance", also with 4 points, from the 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue.</div><div><br></div><div>Take it away, Eric!<br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><b>General comments:</b><br><br>Shiver me timbers, it seems this word sounds nautical to many! - Eric<br>Looks like several of us (me included) believe that the term is nautical. - Hutch<br>There were a lot of hole-based definitions, and also a lot of nautical definitions (maybe suggested by CUTTY SARK). - Elliott<br>The lure of the Cutty Sark proved strong this round. - Jim<br><br><br><b>Eric: 7 = 2 (correct guess) + 2 + 2 + 1</b><br>cutty-eye, n. Port varnish; a mineral deposit formed on stone surfaces over centuries from exposure to sea air.<br>* 2 points from Jim: for the nickname.<br>* 2 points from Ziv: I like it!<br>* 1 point from Elliott: I like the term ``port varnish'', but why only in ports? Sea air meets stone surfaces all along the coast.<br>* Pierre: Is there such a thing as starboard varnish?<br><br><br><b>Linda:</b><br>cutty-eye, v. to estimate a distance or height of an object by using the thumb and squinting the eye while doing so. Nautical term.<br>* Elliott: ``Daumensprung'', they call this in Germany. Your eyes are about one-tenth as far from each other as from your thumb when your arm is outstretched, so if you see your thumb jump three times the length of a 12-meter-long boat when you wink your left vs. right eye, then the boat must be about 10 * 3 * 12 = 360 meters away. But how do you do height?<br><br><br><b>Ziv: 2 = 1 + 1</b><br>cutty-eye (n.) an Australian shrub of the genus Iaops<br>1 point from Pierre: One point and the snottygobble award.<br>1 point from Fran<br>Elliott: Because it cuts your eye, if you don't have a proper hat on.<br><br><br><b>Elliott: 1</b><br>cutty-eye --- (n.) An ectopic buttonhole, esp. one that has worked its way around to the back of the garment where it can no longer be seen by the wearer.<br>* 1 point from Ziv: Utterly delightful<br>* Hutch: "ectopic buttonhole"??? Somehow that doesn't seem possible<br>* Pierre: Sounds like an elliottic buttonhole.<br>* Jim: Most Elliott definition!<br><br><br><b>Fran: 1</b><br>cutty-eye (n) - a void in a cake caused by incomplete mixing of ingredients, resulting in uneven leavening.<br>* 1 point from Joshua<br>* Pierre: Can you have cutty-streuble, cutty-cabbaging, and cutty-frogmouth? (This is a reference to my fictionary round from 2015: these are all various flaws of the voids in cheese. - Ranjit)<br><br><br><b>Nicolas: 1</b><br>cutty-eye, n. [naut.] a wooden shaft to which stays are tied<br>* 1 point from Hutch: This seems to be the most believable nautical definition besides my other vote.<br><br><br><b>Hutch: 3 = 2 + 1</b><br>cutty-eye - n. - a towing or lifting hook with a rectangular or (uncommonly) square eye. The shaped eye keeps the hook from rotating, thus reducing the likelihood of the line dropping off the hook when slack.<br>* 2 points from Pierre<br>* 1 point from Jim<br>* Hutch: Mine. I think I went into too much detail. Further editing might have made it more believable.<br>* Ziv: A cool idea, but either I don't understand the setup, or I don't understand why the shape would help. <br>* Elliott: I'm having trouble picturing this. What would the hook otherwise rotate around? What is ``the line'' --- the one that is tied through the eye of the hook, or the one that is hooked over the crook of the hook?<br><br><br><b>Jean-Joseph: 1</b><br>cutty-eye - n. - a brandy prepared from quince and fennel.<br>* 1 point from Eric: for tastiest.<br>* Hutch: This combination feels like it would be nasty tasting<br>* Ziv: Yum!<br><br><br><b>Joshua: 2</b><br>cutty-eye - n. (Ariz. dial.) - a piece of land in one time zone completely surrounded by land in another time zone<br>* Elliott: Nice! Totally implausible, but nice.<br>* Eric: Someone's been hanging out in Navajo Nation in Hopi Nation in Navajo Nation in Arizona.<br>* Pierre: If not observing DST is sufficient to make another time zone, this does exist in Arizona, namely the Hopi reservation.<br>* Ziv: Totally would have gotten my delight point if not for the ectopic buttonhole<br>* Jim: Second-most Elliott definition!<br><br><br><b>1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue: A Dictionary of Buckish Slang, University Wit, and Pickpocket Eloquence:<br>4 = 2 + 2</b><br>cutty-eye (v) - To look out of the corners of one's eyes, to leer, to look askance.<br>* 2 points from Eric: Literal but I like it.<br>* 2 points from Fran<br>* Ziv: Just obvious enough to maybe be the real thing—but when I conjugate it it sounds wrong again. "cutty-eyeing"? If this had been an adverb, I probably would have two-points-ed it. <br>* Jim: Honorable mention<br><br><br><b>Pierre: 4 = 2 + 2</b><br>cutty-eye, n. The hole in the cathead through which the anchor rode passes.<br>* 2 points from Joshua<br>* 2 points from Hutch: This rings a loud bell for me.<br>* Elliott: ``He marvelled that cats should have two holes cut in their fur precisely where their eyes happened to be.'' --- Georg Christoph Lichtenberg.<br>* Jim: Typo for rope?<br><br><br><br><br><br><br></div>
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