atrip, splat!
FPoodry at aol.com
FPoodry at aol.com
Fri Dec 15 15:44:30 EST 2000
Jean-Joseph wins this round!
BTW, whatever happened to zax?
-Fran
________________________
atrip - v.i. - To move with quick, light steps; to skip; to dance.
by Hutch, 3 points total.
2, Aussie
1, Kir
True, but ungrammatical. Melissa
And with the grace of a dancer, perhaps not to trip? J-J
atrip - n. - double-prowed kayak of the Kwakiutl people
by Eric, 4 points total
2, correctly guessing definition
2, Hutch: "Well, I have a distinct memory of there being a real circum-polar
tribe named "Kwakiutl" but that could be merest verisimilitude. But I'm going
with it (good thing, I've eliminated everything else)"
I somehow *want* to consider this plausible, but every time I try to imagine
it, I just can't. J-J
atrip - n. - (Botanists' slang) A name for the plant Atriplex patula, or any
plant in the genus.
by Pierre, 6 points total
2, correctly guessing definition
1, Aussie
2, Kir
1, Hutch: "Sorry, whoever, I have a very hard time picturing such a slang
term making it into a "real"
dictionary. No way!" ---later--- "Well, I've eliminated everything except
the one I want to give two points to. Guess I've got to pick which of the
others I DIS-believe the least. Which falls to this one even though I said,
"No way!"
earlier. *shrug* 1 point."
I have never seen the notation "Botanists' slang" in a dictionary (though the
true definition doesn't *have* to come straight out of a dictionary). J-J)
atrip - adv. - in an apparently forthright yet subtly condescending manner
by Melissa, 3 points total
1, correctly guessing definition
1, J-J "'He lowered his spectacles and spoke to me atrip.' Maybe. Seems
like a
pretty complex concept, but good enough for a point."
1, Pierre
preference, Elliott (not actually voting)
Hmm, somehow I don't believe in this one either. -Hutch
atrip - adj. - Having fewer than the natural number of eyes, through either
developmental irregularity or injury.
by Jean-Joseph, 7 points total, and the winner
2, correctly guessing definition
2, David
2, Melissa
1, Eric
That's an odd one. But I can't see this word for this definition. I'll bet
there *is* a word for this, though. -Hutch
atrip - adj. & adv. - just clear of the bottom, as an anchor
Webster's II New Riverside University Dictionary
1, David
1, Melissa
2, Eric
2, Pierre
2, J-J: "I was initially put off by the two parts of speech, but I got over
it, and this seems like just the sort of word that a Mistress of
Fictionarities might be inclined to offer up."
No, that's "aweigh" -Hutch
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