[Fictionary] tyg results!
E
e2836 at gmx.com
Thu Aug 1 01:58:59 UTC 2024
Not like it hasn't taken me long enough. Enjoy!
We have a clear winner this time, with Ranjit and his persistent
chewing. Take it away Ranjit!
-------------------------------------------------------
General comments:
Pierre: I was expecting a Slavic derivation, perhaps from the verb pair
тыгать/тыгнуть.
real
tyg, n. A large pottery mug with three or more handles dividing the rim
into sections for several drinkers. Specimens are known with as many as
nine handles.
1 Nicolas, 1 Elliott = 2
Eric: You could look it up! They're in Wikipedia!
Elliott: "Pottery" sounds somehow un-dictionary ("earthenware"?
"ceramic"?) Nine handles would give it a fearsome circumference. One point.
Ranjit
tyg, v. To chew persistently, as with chewing gum or cud. From Danish
_tygge_, chew.
2 Elliott, 2 Hutch, 2 Pierre, 2 Joshua = 8
Elliott: Well, that behavior needs a name, and I can't think of any
reason to vote against it, so two points.
Pierre: Two points for etymology.
Hutch
TYG, abbr. A TLA (Three-Letter Acronym) for "Thank You, God". It has
spread to moderately common usage in Christian on-line sources. See also
TYJ. [UseNet: first known appearance 1998 November 3 by user Shrew in
the talk.religion.christian group.]
2 Fran, 1 David, 2 Ranjit = 5
Elliott: I thought Usenet had a small "n".
Ranjit: 2 points for t.r.c.
Fran
tyg, n. A game of chance involving tossing cowrie shells onto a flat surface
2 Nicolas, 1 Pierre, 1 Joshua = 4
Nicolas: 2 points, nice and simple.
Elliott: I might have gone for this one if the shells had been whelks,
but "tyg" has a North Sea ring to it in my ears, and I have a vague
sense that cowries are tropical. Vague linguistics plus vague biology
isn't enough to base a vote on.
Elliott
tyg, n. A staged cannon, the ammunition of which is a smaller cannon,
which may in turn fire a still smaller cannon, and so on. (_A True and
Complete Narrative of a Voyage to Mars, With Observations Concerning the
Manners and Morals of its Surviving Inhabitants, by A Gentleman of
Wiltshire_, London, 1810.)
2 David + 1 correct vote = 3
Elliott: Precursor to staged rockets. I suspect the physics is against
this one, because in a rocket, the propellant is also the reaction mass,
whereas in a tyg, the propellant is the gunpowder and the reaction mass
is the previous cannon. It sure sounds like something someone would
have tried, though.
Hutch: I have the distinct feeling that I've seen this title before. Has
someone posted it in a fictionition before? Is it the subtitle of _Out
of the Silent Planet_ by C.S. Lewis? Or a Baron Munchausen story?
Whatever? I don't think so! :-)
Pierre: Reminds me of Elliott's bell in a larger bell (aficot, 2020-06).
Ranjit: I suspect Elliott here.
David
tyg, n. (Malay) Orangutan spoor.
1 Ranjit = 1
Pierre: Unlikely, as 'y' isn't a vowel in Malay, even in the Dutch
orthography.
Joshua
tyg, n. A medium-sized gall appearing on a deciduous tree root, caused
by subterranean bacteria in the soil, often causing disfiguration or
stunted growth over time.
1 Fran = 1
Elliott: I don't think a dictionary would say "subterranean bacteria in
the soil"; it would have left out one or the other.
Pierre
tyg, n. A South African and Namibian cookie flavored with rooibos and
termite mushrooms.
1 Hutch = 1
Elliott: Oh, *those* cookies! No thanks, I'm not hungry.
Hutch: I don't really believe this one, but it deserves a vote for sheer
chutzpah: 1 point.
Pierre: I should have added the etymology: Afrikaans, from German Teig.
Nicolas
tyg, v. Select; anoint. n. A multi-round weighted-choice voting method.
1 correct vote = 1
Hutch: I thought that the point (or *a* point, at any rate) of
weighted-choice voting was to eliminate the need for multiple rounds of
voting?
-- Eric
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