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Oddities

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Posted by: jojomataketa

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ACCEDED, CABBAGE, BAGGAGE, DEFACED, EFFACED, DECEDED, DEEDEED, DEFADED, DEGAGEE, GEAGGED, and FEEDBAG are seven-letter words which can be played on a musical instrument. CABBAGED, DEBAGGED, and BAGGAGED are eight-letter words
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ADCOMSUBORDCOMPHIBSPAC is the longest acronym in the 1965 edition of the Acronyms, Initialisms, and Abbreviations Dictionary. It is a Navy term standing for Administrative Command, Amphibious Forces, Pacific Fleet Subordinate Command . Another acronym PUMCODOXPURSACOMLOPAR, stands for "pulse-modulated coherent Doppler-effect X-band pulse-repetition synthetic-array pulse compression lobe planar array" .

COMSUBCOMNELMCOMHEDSUPPACT (26 letters) stands for Commander, Subordinate Command, U.S. Naval Forces Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean, Commander Headquarters Support Activities .


However, the world's longest acronym according to the Guinness Book of Words is NIIOMTPLABOPARMBETZHELBETRABSBOMONIMONKONOTDTEKHST ROMONT (56 letters, 54 in Cyrillic). Found in the Concise Dictionary of Soviet Terminology, it means: The laboratory for shuttering, reinforcement, concrete and ferroconcrete operations for composite-monolithic and monolithic constructions of the Department of the Technology of Building-assembly operations of the Scientific Research Institute of the Organization for building mechanization and technical aid of the Academy of Building and Architecture of the USSR.

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According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica (15th ed.) PAKISTAN is an acronym for the five Northern units of India - Punjab, North-West Frontier (Afghan) Province, Kashmir, Sind and Baluchistan, and was coined in 1933 by Choudhary Rahmat Ali (1895-1951). However, according to the World Book Encyclopedia (1976), Pakistan means "land of the pure" in Urdu .

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Posted by: jojomataketa

AEGILOPS (alternate spelling of egilops, an ulcer in a part of the eye) is apparently the longest word which consists of letters in alphabetical order.


Seven-letter words from with their letters in alphabetical order are: ACCENTY, ACCOMPT, ADDILLS, AFFORST, ALLOQUY, BEGHOST, BELLOOT, BILLOWY, DEGLORY, FILLOPS, and FILLOTT.

Six-letter words with their letters in alphabetical order include: ABBESS, ABHORS, ACCENT, ACCEPT, ACCESS, ACCOST, ADDERS, ALMOST, BEGINS, BELLOW, BENOTT, BIOPSY, BLOTTY, CHILLS, CHILLY, CHIMPS, CHIPPY, CHITTY, CHOOSY, CHOPPY, CLOTTY, DIMPSY, EFFORT, FLOORS, FLOPPY, FLOSSY, GHOSTY, GLOSSY, and KNOTTY.

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ASTHMA begins and ends with a vowel and has no other vowels in between. Some less common words of six or more letters with this property are ISTHMI (alternate plural of isthmus), ORMSBY (name of several towns in the U. S.), ACHCHA (a S. Asian expression meaning "is that so" or "good"), ANDHRA (an Indian State), ANGSTY (adjective of angst), ORPHNE (Greek nymph in Hades)


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Some two-syllable words which become one-syllable words by adding a letter or letters are: AGUE/PLAGUE, AGUE/VAGUE, AVE/CAVE, AVE/HAVE, RUGGED/SHRUGGED, AGED/RAGED, AGED/STAGED, BOA/BOAT, OLE/SOLE, OLE/WHOLE, RAGGED/DRAGGED, NAKED/SNAKED, SOUR/SOURCE, WINGÉD/TWINGED.

Some common words which change from one to three syllables upon the addition of just one letter are: ARE/AREA, CAME/CAMEO, CRIME/CRIMEA, GAPE/AGAPE, HOSE/HOSEA, JUDE/JUDEA, LIEN/ALIEN, OLE/OLEO, RODE/RODEO, ROME/ROMEO, SMILE/SIMILE and WHINE/WAHINE. (Wahine is defined as a Polynesian woman or a female surfer)
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Posted by: jojomataketa

Think of words ending in -gry. Hungry and angry are 2 of them. There are three words in the english language. What is the third? You use it everyday.



Posted by: jojomataketa

Beijing has three dotted letters in a row. Other words with multiple dotted letters are Fiji, Hajji, hijinks, hijiki (a type of seaweed), Ujiji (where Stanley found Livingstone in 1871), Ajijic and Pijijiapan (cities in Mexico), jinjili (an alternative name for "sesame seed"), ijijimò (Nauruan for the adjective "lean," and Nauruan is a palindrome!).
Shijiazhuang (Chinese city).
Niijima and Iijima are Japanese last names;


In Dutch, there are jij (you), pijjekker (pea-jacket) schrooiijzer (upstanding cutting iron for bars, rods), sjiiet (follower of the Shia), snijijzer (cutting iron), uitdijing (expansion), and zijig (effeminate).


In Lithuanian, jiji is an archaic Lithuanian form of "him" consisting exclusively of dotted letters.

In Swahili, jiji means "city" and kijiji means a small city or village.


In Hungarian, jöjjön (meaning "he should come") has seven dots in a row.


In Finnish, pääjääjää (meaning "the main stayer", partitive case) has 14 dots in a row.

A property development company in the Canadian territory of Nunavut is the Katujjijiit Development Corporation, with six consecutive dotted letters.



Posted by: jojomataketa

Quote:
Originally Posted by jojomataketa
Think of words ending in -gry. Hungry and angry are 2 of them. There are three words in the english language. What is the third? You use it everyday.


What..No reply!?...What IS the third??!



Posted by: jojomataketa

The only countries in the world with one syllable in their names are CHAD, FRANCE, GREECE, LAOS (one pronunciation), and SPAIN. There is also WALES, although it is not an independent country

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DEEDED has each of its letters appearing three times. Other such words are GEGGEE (the victim of a hoax...we have a few in this HYIP arena), FEFFEE (trustee of public land), SHEESHEHS (tobacco pipes)

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http://members.aol.com/gulfhigh2/dord.jpg



DORD is a non-existent word entered into the second edition of Webster's New International Dictionary by mistake. The following is taken from The Story of Webster's Third: Philip Gove's Controversial Dictionary and Its Critics by Herbert C. Morton (1994):
When the guidelines for etymology in Webster's Third were nearing completion, Gove took time out to add the story of dord to the lore of how things can go wrong in dictionary making. Dord was a word that had appeared spontaneously and had found a quiet niche in the English language two decades earlier. It was recorded in Webster's Second in 1934 on page 771, where it remained undetected for five years. It disappeared from the dictionary a year later without ever having entered common parlance. The facts, which had been established years earlier through a search of company files, were as follows, as abridged from Gove's explanation.


The lack of an etymology for dord, meaning "density," was noted by an editor on February 28, 1939, when he was perusing the dictionary. Startled by the omission, he went to the files to track down what had happened and what needed to be done. There, he found, first, a three-by-five white slip that had been sent to the company by a consultant in chemistry on July 31, 1931, bearing the notation "D or d, cont/ density." It was intended to be the basis for entering an additional abbreviation at the letter D in the next edition. The notation "cont," short for "continued," was to alert the typist to the fact that there would be several such entries for abbreviations at D.

A change in the organization of the dictionary possibly added to the confusion that followed. For the 1934 edition, all abbreviations were to be assembled in a separate "Abbreviations" section at the back of the book; in the previous edition words and abbreviations appeared together in a single alphabetical listing (which is how they again appeared in the Third Edition.) But after the original slip was typed for editorial handling, it was misdirected. Eventually, it came to be treated with the words rather than with the abbreviations.

Th editorial stylist who received the first typed version should have marked "or" to be set in italics to indicate that the letters were abbreviations (D or d). But instead, she drew a continuous wavy line underneath to signify that "D or d" should be set in boldface in the manner of an entry word, and a label was added, "Physics & Chem." Since entry words were to be typed with a space between letters, the editorial stylist may have inferred that the typist had intended to write d o r d; the mysterious "cont" was ignored. These errors should have been caught when the word was retyped on a different color slip for the printer, but they were not. The stylist who received this version crossed out the "cont" and added the part-of-speech label n for noun.

"As soon as someone else entered the pronunciation," Gove wrote, "dord was given the slap on the back that sent breath into its being. Whether the etymologist ever got a chance to stifle it, there is no evidence. It simply has no etymology. Thereafter, only a proofreader had final opportunity at the word, but as the proof passed under his scrutiny he was at the moment not so alert and suspicious as usual." The last slip in the file -- added in 1939 -- was marked "plate change imperative/urgent." The entry was deleted, and the space was closed up by lengthening the entry that followed. In 1940 bound books began appearing without the ghost word but with a new abbreviation. In the list of meanings for the abbreviation "D or d" appeared the phrase "density, Physics." Probably too bad, Gove added, "for why shouldn't dord mean density?"
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Posted by: jojomataketa

DREAMT is the only common word in English ending in -MT.

EARTHLING is first found in print in 1593. Other surprisingly old words are SPACESHIP (1894), ACID RAIN (1858), ANTACID (1753), HAS-BEEN (1606), HAIRDRESSER (1771), MOLE (in connection with espionage, 1622, by Sir Francis Bacon), FUNK (a strong smell, 1623; a state of panic, 1743), MILKY WAY (ca. 1384, but earlier in Latin), ****TAIL (1803), and MS. (used instead of Miss or Mrs., 1949). An earlier use of Ms. is on a 1767 tombstone in Plymouth, Massachusetts: "HERE LIES INTERRD [sic] THE BODY OF MS. SARAH SPOONER." However, it is considered a likely mistake by the engraver of the tombstone. A 2002 New York Times article points out that John A. Murphy is credited with a 1972 marketing masterstroke with "Lite, a fine Pilsner beer," but that the OED shows a use of leoht beor in about the year 1000. According to a 2005 column by William Safire, the phrase INTELLIGENT DESIGN appears in an 1847 issue of Scientific American, but it was probably coined in its present sense in Humanism, a 1903 book by Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller: "It will not be possible to rule out the supposition that the process of evolution may be guided by an intelligent design." According to Time (July 3, 2006), LUNATIC FRINGE was coined by Theodore Roosevelt in a letter he wrote after losing the 1912 election: "The various admirable movements in which I have been engaged have always developed among their numbers a large lunatic fringe."



Posted by: jojomataketa

ESCALATOR is one of many words that were originally trademarks but have become ordinary words found in dictionaries. Some other words which were originally trademarks (or still are) are AQUA-LUNG, ASPIRIN, BAKELITE, BAND-AID, BREATHALYZER, CELLOPHANE, CELLULOID, CORNFLAKES, DEEPFREEZE, DICTAPHONE, DITTO, DRY ICE, DUMPSTER, FORMICA, FRISBEE, GRANOLA, GUNK, HEROIN, JACUZZI, JEEP, JELL-O, KEROSENE, KLEENEX, LANOLIN, MACE, MIMEOGRAPH, PHILLIPS SCREW, PING-PONG, PLEXIGLAS, POGO STICK, POPSICLE, PYREX, Q-TIP, ROLLERBLADE, SCOTCH TAPE, SHEETROCK, STETSON HAT, STYROFOAM, TABLOID, TARMAC, THERMOS, TRAMPOLINE, VASELINE, VELCRO, WINDBREAKER, YO-YO, ZIPPER. In addition NYLON was coined by du Pont, although the term was never trademarked.
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EWE and YOU are pronounced exactly the same, yet share no letters in common. Other examples: EYE/I, OX/AUKS, OH/EAU (de cologne), A/EH, AWE/OR (Australian pronunciation), AYE/I, COUGH/KAF (kaf is a variant of kaph), QUAY/KI (a Polynesian palm), EYE/AI (three-toed sloth), FEE/PHI (Greek letter), KEY/CHI (Greek letter), OZ/AAHS, CEE/SI, HAUT/OWE, WAY/HUE (city in Vietnam)
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Posted by: jojomataketa

The three-syllable word HIDEOUS, with the change of a single consonant, becomes a two-syllable word with no vowel sounds in common: HIDEOUT.
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HIV VIRUS is a redundancy, since the "v" stands for "virus."

Some other common redundancies which include an abbreviation are ATM MACHINE, SALT TALKS, VIN NUMBER, PIN NUMBER, AC CURRENT, DC CURRENT, ISBN NUMBER, DOS OPERATING SYSTEM, ABS BRAKING SYSTEM, DIMM MODULE (Dynamic Inline Memory Module), EFT TRANSFER (Electronic Funds Transfer), EMP PULSE (Electromagnetic Pulse), and MSDS SHEETS (Material Safety Data Sheet), DC COMICS (DC = Detective Comics).



[RIO GRANDE RIVER is a redundancy since Rio means "river." There are numerous similar place names such as Gobi and Sahara deserts, Fujiyama and Sierra mountains, La Brea Tar Pits, etc.; however, these are generally not considered redundancies because they involve two languages.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------



Posted by: jojomataketa

HONORIFICABILITUDINITATIBUS is the longest word consisting entirely of alternating vowels and consonants.



Other such words are ALUMINOSILICATES, CYTOMEGALOVIRUSES, DEPOLARIZABILITY, EPICORACOHUMERALER, HETEROZYGOSITY, HEXOSAMINIDASES, HYPOVITAMINOSISES, ICULANIBOKOLAS, MYELOCYTOMATOSISES PARAMYXOVIRUSES, PARAROSANILINES, PARASITOLOGICAL, SUPEREROGATORILY, TENOSYNOVITIDES, TENOSYNOVITISES, UNIMAGINATIVELY, VERISIMILITUDES. An endangered Hawaiian plant, Abutilon eremitopetalum, and a recently extinct burrowing mammal from Madagascar, Malagasy bibymalagasy.



IMMUNOHEMATOLOGIC contains 8 pairs of alternating vowels and consonants.

Some words containing 7 pairs of alternating vowels and consonants are: ALUMINOSILICATE, AUTOMANIPULATIVE, DELIBERATIVENESS, GELATINIZABILITY, HYPEROXYGENIZES, IMAGINATIVENESS, INERADICABILITY, INOPERATIVENESS, MEGALOPOLITANISM, PHENOMENOLOGICAL, PHOTOPOLYMERIZATION, PRECIPITINOGENIC, PREFIGURATIVENESS, REMUNERATIVENESS, SEMIMINERALIZED, UNAPOLOGETICALLY, UNILATERALIZATION, UNILATERALIZES, VERISIMILITUDINOUS.

GORAN IVANESEVIC (a top tennis player) may be the longest name of a relatively famous person that alternates consonants and vowels.

UNITED ARAB EMIRATES is the longest name of a country consisting of alternating vowels and consonants.

Other place names consisting of alternating vowels and consonants include GULEMALAMALALANA Point in Papua New Guinea, REBUREBUSIWASIWA (a Papuan town), KAWAKAWAMALAMALA (a Fijian stream), PROMYSEL IMENI NARIMANOVA (a village in Azerbaijian) and WEROWOCOMOCO (Indian place name on John Smith's map of Virginia). Some Japanese place names with alternating vowels and consonants include: KAKINOKIZAKA (district in Meguro, Tokyo), KASUMIGASEKI (district in Chiyoda, Tokyo), and TAKADANOBABA (district in Shinjuku, Tokyo). These spellings use the widely-recognized Hepburn system for the Romanized alphabet version of Japanese words. In this system, all Japanese ideographic and phonetic characters can be represented by a "vowel-only" or "consonant(sound)-vowel" combination

And how about my user name: JOJOMATAKATA !



Posted by: jojomataketa

*The earliest known appearance of the word HELLO in print is in a letter written by Thomas Edison dated August 15, 1877. In the letter, addressed to T. B. A. David, president of Central District and Printing Telegraph Company in Pittsburgh, Edison suggested that the word should be used to answer the telephone. HELLO is an alteration of the much older word HOLLO.

*The most commonly used words in spoken English are I, YOU, THE, and A.

*The longest word with a horizontal line of symmetry is COCCIDIOCIDE. Some other words are: BEDECKED, BOOHOOED, CEBID (a type of monkey), CHECKBOOK, CHOICE, CODEBOOK, COOKBOOK, DECIDED, DIOXIDE, DOBCHICK, EXCEEDED, HIDE, HOODOOED, ICEBOX, KEBOBBED, OBOE, OKEECHOBEE, and OXOBOXO (a small lake in southeastern Connecticut, also a palindrome).



*Some words with a vertical line of symmetry are MOM, WOW, OTTO, MAAM, MA'AM, TOOT, AHA, AA, AHA, AIA, AMA, AVA, AWA, HAH, HOH, HUH, MAM, MIM, MM, MUM, OHO, OO, OXO, TAT, TIT, TOT, TUT, UTU, VAV, WAW.



*All of the letters of these words have a vertical line of symmetry: AUTOMATA, AUTOTOMY, HIMATIA, HOITY-TOITY, HOMOTAXIA, MAHATMA, MAHIMAHI, MAMMATI, MAMMOTH, MATAMATA, MOTIVITY, MOUTH-TO-MOUTH, MYOMATA, MYXOMATA, OUTWAIT, TATOUAY, TAXIWAY, THATAWAY, TIMOTHY, TOMATO, TOWAWAY, WITHOUT, YAWATAHAMA (a city in Japan), and YOUTH.



*Upper case BID is horizontally reflective while lower case bid is vertically reflective.



*SWIMS has 180-degree rotational symmetry.



*These words with 6 or more letters have all letters rotationally symmetrical: NINONS, ONIONS, SISSOOS, SOZINS, ZOONOSIS, ZOOZOOS.
*All of the letters of these words have both horizontal and vertical lines of symmetry: HI, OH, IO, OHIO, OHO, and IHI'IHI (rare Hawaiian fern that now exists only in three populations, two of which are inside volcanoes).
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Posted by: jojomataketa

INTESTINES has each of its letters occurring twice. Some other such words: APPEASES, ARRAIGNING, BERIBERI, CHOWCHOW, COUSCOUS, FROUFROU, HAPPENCHANCE, HORSESHOER, HOTSHOTS, MAHIMAHI, MESOSOME, REAPPEAR, SCINTILLESCENT, SHANGHAIINGS, SIGNINGS, , TEAMMATE.

IRAQ is one of the very few words ending in Q. Obscure words ending in Q are: ABQAIQ (a city in Saudi Arabia), AUYUITTUQ (National Park in Canada), FARUQ (former king of Egypt, also spelled "Farouk"), HALQ AL-WADI (city in Tunisia), INUPIAQ (an Eskimo people), IQ, KANGIQSUALUJJUAQ (an Inuit village in Quebec), KUUJJUAQ (a Canadian village), PDQ, PONTACQ, QAANAAQ (settlement in Greenland; it's also a palindrome), QEQERTARSUAQ (island in Greenland), QUTTINIRPAAQ (National Park in Canada) SADIQ (a city in India), SHOQ, SUQ, ZAQAZIQ (or ZAGAZIG, a city in Egypt), TALAQ, ZIA-UL-HAQ (a proper name)




Posted by: jojomataketa

MHO is a unit of electrical conductance. Since conductance is the reciprocal of resistance, which is measured in ohms, MHO is OHM spelled backwards.



The other word the origin of which is a backwards spelling is YOB, now more commonly spelled yobbo, which is the backwards spelling of boy.



Two other electrical units formed by backwards spellings: DARAF and YRNEH.



In mathematics ATLED is a rare term for the upside-down capital delta (although DEL and NABLA are more frequently used) and the reciprocal of slope is sometimes called EPOLS.



Actor Howard KEEL was born Harold Clifford LEEK.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------MONDAY is the only day of the week that has an anagram, DYNAMO.
The only months that have anagrams are MARCH, APRIL, and MAY. The anagrams are CHARM, RIPAL, and YAM.
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Posted by: Pete Berg

According to me it ia mainly related with the navy.i know very well because of my elder brother.he is in navy.




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