[Fictionary] SQUOYLE results
E Cohen
eac at inbox.com
Thu Mar 26 16:30:15 EDT 2020
On 26-Mar-20 16:07, lindafowens at netzero.net wrote:
> I was thinking in my wickiup def about where my brother Bill used to
> live on the Olympic Peninsula: Sequim, pronounced Squim. Linda PS My
> mother in law used to used wickiup for an all-purpose def of any small hut.
I believe "Wickiup!" is the traditional cowboy cry when committing a
change to Wikipedia.
BTW, good wishes for all fictioneers to be safe and well.
> ---------- Original Message ----------
> From: Hutch <hutchinson.jeff at gmail.com>
> To: fictionary group <fictionary at swarpa.net>
> Subject: Re: [Fictionary] SQUOYLE results
> Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2020 04:51:38 -0400
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 10:21 PM eLLioTT morEton <em at swarpa.net
> <mailto:em at swarpa.net>> wrote:
> [snippety]
> Â
>
> Jim:Â Apropos of very little, I once mused about how to calculate the
> shape of the path a squirrel would take if it were trying to climb a
> tree
> quickly while remaining out of sight of a pedestrian walking in a
> straight
> line past the tree. I called the shape a squiral, but didnt actually
> work
> out a formula for it...
>
> I saw a video on YouTube a while back where the guy did work out a
> formula LIKE this one, not identical. I looked for it today, but
> couldn't find it :-(
> [snippety]
>
> ________________________________________________________________________________
> # Hutch
> squoyle -- n. -- (Am. Plains states, especially south central Nebraska)
> correct width of a quarter-section farm field, approx 2,550 to 2,600
> feet.
> (For unscrupulous surveyor: Berwyn M Squoyle, notorious for platting
> approximately 600 square miles over a period of five years with short
> measures in order to sell the "extra" sections for his own benefit;
> murdered in July 1898 outside Ansley, Nebraska).
>
> Pierre: I'm in a metes-and-bounds state, but I had to learn about
> division
> of public
> lands, so I'm pretty sure I'd have heard of this.
>
> Jim:Â Well, it cant be by Elliott, so perhaps David crafted this one?
> Honorable mention.
>
> There's actually a clue hidden in plain sight there. There *is* actually
> a town called Ansley, Nebraska. If you zoom in far enough on Google
> Maps, you will find a few miles outside of Ansley, the town of Berwyn:
> from which I named my villain. :-)
> [snippety]
> BB,
> Hutch
> Â
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--
-- Eric | eac at inbox.com
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