[Fictionary] BURLING results
Ranjit Bhatnagar
ranjit at moonmilk.com
Fri Feb 2 15:50:20 UTC 2024
Pierre: "I should have two, right? Can we call Emmanuel Recount?"
I completely forgot to take correct votes into account when scoring. I'm on
the phone now with Emmanuel, just a moment.... ok, the fax from Recount
Industries is coming in, and I've included it below. Apologies for the
miscount.
We now have a tie between Joshua and Jean-Joseph at 6 points each. I'll
leave it to you two to decide who'll take the next round (unless you
specifically don't want to decide, in which case I have a vaguely
appropriate measure in mind that I can apply.)
Ballot with Emmanuel's annotations in **bold**:
PIERRE: 1 **and then 1 more for a correct guess = 2**
burling, n. The activity of visiting shopping malls hunting for bargains.
- Eric: From "Burlington"? One point for cleverness.
- Nicolas: I hope there is a word for this
- Pierre: Shop One or Shop the Mall! (Sign in Burlington, North Carolina)
- Hutch: As far as I can tell, shopping malls rarely have actual
"bargains", however frequently they advertise them. I have heard of
"saling", which is browsing garage sales.
- Elliott: Burlington antedates malls.
- Jean-Joseph: Sounds invented, but I'll be embarrassed if it's not.
NICOLAS: 2 **and then 2 more for a correct guess = 4**
burling, n. (Naut.) 1. Tightly coiled rope or cable. 2. A brewing mutiny.
- Pierre: Is a brewing mutiny a mutiny in a brewery, or is it a mutiny that
hasn't come to a head yet? "Tightly coiled rope or cable" could be a real
def, even though it's a fake
def. Two points.
- Hutch: I could believe the first, but not the second.
- Elliott: The word sounds appropriate to both defs, but the defs don't
sound appropriate to each other. If #1 were right, wouldn't #2 be
something like "an efficient crew", "a taut ship", etc.?
- Jean-Joseph: Rope I can see, but tightly coiling cable doesn't seem like
a great idea. And I don't see the connection to to an uprising among the
baristas.
DAVID: 1+2 = 3
burling - n. - stripped, washed, stripped, and dried jute fibres ready to
be woven into burlap
- Nicolas: Two similar ones but burlap seems too on the nose
- Pierre: Burl? nah.
- Hutch: 1
- Elliott: Implies that "burlap" is "burl" + "ap", when every schoolchild
knows that burlap is so named because when you wear it, you feel like
you've got a burr on your lap. Burlington would mean "jute-mill town".
Hmm.
- Jean-Joseph: By elimination I'm down to the two textile definitions, and
I'll give the two points to this one.
THEFREEDICTIONARY DOT COM: 2+2+1+1 = 6
burling (v) Dressing or finishing cloth by removing knots, lumps, slubs, or
loose threads.
- Eric: So, "burling" makes 3/7 of us think of burlap. I reject them all.
- Joshua: 2
- Nicolas: 2
- Pierre: I don't know "slubs", but one point.
- Hutch: I would have gone for this one instead of the "burlap" definition
above, but "knots" and "slubs" are not things you would see in woven cloth:
you would see them in spun thread, and you would remove them before
weaving. (My mother is a spinstress and weaver.)
- Elliott: Burlington would be "cloth-finishing town". Maybe.... But I
don't know "slub", and I'm reluctant to vote for a def that I don't
understand.
- Elliott, later: Checking the OED afterwards: "To dress (cloth), esp. by
removing knots and lumps; ‘to dress cloth as fullers do’ (Johnson)." And
the first definition for _burl_ is "A small knot or lump in wool or
cloth.". 1879 quotation: "The burler..carefully removes any knots or
burls."
- Jean-Joseph: One point to the remaining textile def.
JOSHUA: 1+1+2 = 4 **and then 2 more for a correct guess = 6**
burling, n. a large, circular chamber dug in the center of a rabbit warren,
used as a nest by the highest-ranking doe of the colony.
- David: 1
- Eric: Would have gotten a point if it had used the phrase "queen rabbit".
- Nicolas: 1
- Pierre: Rabbits, you have failed to heed the previous warrening!
- Hutch: Somebody has been reading Watership Down recently. However, my
recollection is that, in reality, nests for the does are in dead-end or
blocked side-passages, rather than in any large central space.
- Elliott: This is a nice one. Do rabbits have a pecking order? No idea!
What's the advantage of being in the center? Security? Warmth? Burlington
would be "Town of the Senior Doe". Two points.
- Jean-Joseph: Do rabbits really have a social structure like ants?
ERIC: 2+1 = 3
burling, n. A customs official in charge of enforcing regulations on
foreign currency and currency exchange. (Fr. Russ. "болгяг", guard.)
- David: 2
- Joshua: 1
- Nicolas: Now I want to play Papers Please
- Pierre: "Болгяг" doesn't sound Russian. Is it Turkic or Mongolian? 'Г',
like 'к' and 'х', is followed by 'а', not 'я', although it's followed by
'и', not 'ы' (the Czechs beg to differ). I don't see how "болгяг" would
turn into "burling" either.
- Hutch: I would have expected a Russian currency official to have some
connection to either valyuta or den'gi (two words for, roughly, "money") in
their name.
- Elliott: Definition 2: A customs official in charge of pocketing a hefty
share of any foreign currency in exchange for not enforcing regulations on
it. You can get from Canada to Burlington by boat.
- Jean-Joseph: I think that transliterates to "bolgyag". Hmm. Does that
seem like it would morph into "burling"? I'll guess not. (More likely it's
from Pierre.)
ELLIOTT:
burling (n.) -- 1. A failure mode of lava lamps, in which wax stops
circulating and accumulates at the top due to a weak or reversed
temperature gradient. 2. Obstructed turnover in rotating leadership
positions owing to a lack of willing successors.
- Nicolas: The failure mode of lava lamps is kid begging and begging for
one and then almost never using it 😆
- Hutch: I've certainly been in the latter situation. But I'm highly
skeptical of both definitions: they both seem overly specific to be real.
:-D
- Elliott: Self-plagiarism; #1 is reverse-biasing the "convective heat
diode" def for "ucalegon", the one that sounded so physically impossible.
(Even an actual physicist I described it to started to object ``But
Maxwell's Demon ---'' before identifying it as a convection cell.) #2 is
new, but does it accurately describe Burlington?
- Jean-Joseph: Maybe from Elliott?
JEAN-JOSEPH: 2+2+1 = 5 **and then 1 more for a correct guess = 6**
burling - adj. - Reliable, trustworthy, dependable.
- Eric: Two points. Because I reject _a priori_ all the burlap/fiber
definitions, and the only other plausible definition is mine.
- Nicolas: It's probably actually this one
- Hutch: I suspect that someone is thinking of "burly" (or perhaps the
Dwarfish Ankh-Morpork arms dealers Burley and Stronginthearm). But going
for an adjective is worth 2 points. (Besides which, I don't really believe
any of the rest either. :-D)
- Elliott: Maybe people used to esteem those virtues enough to name a town
after them. One point.
- Jean-Joseph: In honor of Hutch's and my mutual friend Doug Berling, who
certainly has these qualities. (I saw Doug late last summer, but I expect
it's been many years since he and Hutch have crossed paths.)
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