Game: Caladont
- DaemianLucifer
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smithereens
As for ionic,ionization,yes,those are two different words,both acceptable.In fact,I think both were used in round 3.
Words used:
Gyttja,jaded,dedication,ionization,onerous,singer,ingerminate,nates,testudo,tudor,
dormitory,toryism,smithereens
Preliminary score:
Corribus - 7
soupnazii - 7
DaemianLucifer - 5
eekstah - 4
Gaidal Cain - 4
urbanmonk - 4
Phobos - 3
theGryphon - 3
vaudy - 2
As for ionic,ionization,yes,those are two different words,both acceptable.In fact,I think both were used in round 3.
Words used:
Gyttja,jaded,dedication,ionization,onerous,singer,ingerminate,nates,testudo,tudor,
dormitory,toryism,smithereens
Preliminary score:
Corribus - 7
soupnazii - 7
DaemianLucifer - 5
eekstah - 4
Gaidal Cain - 4
urbanmonk - 4
Phobos - 3
theGryphon - 3
vaudy - 2
Last edited by DaemianLucifer on 31 Jul 2006, 20:48, edited 3 times in total.
- DaemianLucifer
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- DaemianLucifer
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I already did.And it seems it can be used as a style of dress as well,so its acceptable.Gaidal Cain wrote:DL: check my comment about the word Tudor. AFAIK, it's always used as a proper name (least obvious is in uses as a "Tudor house").
- Gaidal Cain
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The Free Dictonary wrote:Adj. 1. Tudor - of or relating to a style of architecture in England in the 15th century; "half-timbered Tudor houses"; "Tudor furniture"
Merriam-Webster wrote:Main Entry: Tu·dor
Pronunciation: 'tü-d&r, 'tyü-
Function: adjective
Etymology: Henry Tudor (Henry VII of England)
1 : of or relating to the English royal house that ruled from 1485 to 1603
2 : of, relating to, or characteristic of the Tudor period
- Tudor noun
It's still a noun, it's just used as an adjective (which the English language permits).Wikipedia on adjective wrote: Adjectival use of nouns
English (like some other Germanic languages) is unusual in that it allows nouns to be used adjectivally (i.e., in function they are "adjectives", in structure they are nouns), as in
a Georgia peach
or
his farewell letter.
In other languages, some sort of grammatical functor between the two nouns may be required.
These attributive nouns are not classed as adjectives, and they cannot be used in post-position; while the majority of adjectives can function both attributively and predicatively, an attributive noun cannot be made predicative by simply putting it after the head word.
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- theGryphon
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So we're allowed to use Versace or Calvin Klein?!DaemianLucifer wrote:I already did.And it seems it can be used as a style of dress as well,so its acceptable.
torso
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Because they're 2 words?!theGryphon wrote:Btw, why was "a tergo" not valid? It appears in my Random House Webster's dictionary. Then, for example, is "a priori" not valid either?
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lurer
Edit: So it's OK if you put a dash in between, like good-looking, but this way not OK. Yet, words like "a priori" that come from Latin are treated (and used) as single words, jsyk...
Edit: So it's OK if you put a dash in between, like good-looking, but this way not OK. Yet, words like "a priori" that come from Latin are treated (and used) as single words, jsyk...
I believe in science and that science can explain everything.
Because God has made it all work in such a beautiful way...
Because God has made it all work in such a beautiful way...
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Give it a few more decades.theGryphon wrote:THAT would be wrong!
ergonomic
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