to be fair I don't think it is from the CHA I think it is from the Cancer Care (or whomever) websitecj wrote:You can't go further to top that. The CHA ought to provide an apogee for their word-bastardisation or it may culminate in protest.J.R. wrote:englishangel wrote:Summitted, Summitted, SUMMITTED, SUMMITTED
AAAAARRRRGGGGHHHHHHH
http://www.chassociation.org/news/index.php#56
Looks like you've reached the PEAK of your exasperation, Mary !!
Word of the day
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I cringed when I added that news article, but Mary's right, it's an email newsletter from the support team, not the CHA's words and I baulk at altering other people's press releases, etc...englishangel wrote:to be fair I don't think it is from the CHA I think it is from the Cancer Care (or whomever) websitecj wrote:You can't go further to top that. The CHA ought to provide an apogee for their word-bastardisation or it may culminate in protest.J.R. wrote:
Looks like you've reached the PEAK of your exasperation, Mary !!
Louise Barr Col B 89-96 | Fine Artist Printmaker
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A bit of midwifery here.
The membrane across the base of the brain is called the tentorium. (tent-shaped)
The blood supply to the brain runs through it and often if a baby (especially a pre-term one) is delivered badly and bleeds into the brain it is becasue there is a tentorial tear.
The membrane across the base of the brain is called the tentorium. (tent-shaped)
The blood supply to the brain runs through it and often if a baby (especially a pre-term one) is delivered badly and bleeds into the brain it is becasue there is a tentorial tear.
"If a man speaks, and there isn't a woman to hear him, is he still wrong?"
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Does the N.H.S. have to CANVAS for surgeouns to repair the damage ???englishangel wrote:A bit of midwifery here.
The membrane across the base of the brain is called the tentorium. (tent-shaped)
The blood supply to the brain runs through it and often if a baby (especially a pre-term one) is delivered badly and bleeds into the brain it is becasue there is a tentorial tear.

John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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sortition
• noun [mass noun] - the action of selecting or determining something by the casting or drawing of lots.
— origin late 16th cent.: from Latin sortitio(n-), from sortire ‘divide or obtain by lot’.
Hmmm, the latin noun sounds like a minor character from 'Up Pompeii' (once again!).
• noun [mass noun] - the action of selecting or determining something by the casting or drawing of lots.
— origin late 16th cent.: from Latin sortitio(n-), from sortire ‘divide or obtain by lot’.
Hmmm, the latin noun sounds like a minor character from 'Up Pompeii' (once again!).
Ba.A / Mid. B 1972 - 1978
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
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Sorry, I've been neglecting this thread lately....
meronym
• noun Linguistics - a term which denotes part of something but which is used to refer to the whole of it, e.g. faces when used to mean people in "I see several familiar faces present".
— derivatives
meronymy noun.
— origin from Greek meros ‘part’ + onuma ‘name’.
meronym
• noun Linguistics - a term which denotes part of something but which is used to refer to the whole of it, e.g. faces when used to mean people in "I see several familiar faces present".
— derivatives
meronymy noun.
— origin from Greek meros ‘part’ + onuma ‘name’.
Ba.A / Mid. B 1972 - 1978
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
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Talking of meronymy,
It has a second meaning -
An Old Blue could be a meronym - if you're talking about OB's that have sadly passed away and current pupils of the school, then as I understand it Old Blues are meronyms.
Or - if you have three pints of beer one evening - is the second one a meronym???
It has a second meaning -
An Old Blue could be a meronym - if you're talking about OB's that have sadly passed away and current pupils of the school, then as I understand it Old Blues are meronyms.
Or - if you have three pints of beer one evening - is the second one a meronym???
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- Exiled_in_Rome
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...and when it comes to names, it strikes me as quite remarkable that in english, the country name "Turkey" denotes a bird too, and is the only country that has a name that is also a bird.. and that in Portuguese (and Spanish)... the country name for Turkey means nothing but the name for the country, whereas the name Peru also denotes.. yep, you've guessed it.. a turkey....
not as concise as Onuma but still..
not as concise as Onuma but still..
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What about Crowashia?Exiled_in_Rome wrote:...and when it comes to names, it strikes me as quite remarkable that in english, the country name "Turkey" denotes a bird too, and is the only country that has a name that is also a bird.. and that in Portuguese (and Spanish)... the country name for Turkey means nothing but the name for the country, whereas the name Peru also denotes.. yep, you've guessed it.. a turkey....
not as concise as Onuma but still..
David Eastburn (Prep B and Mid A 1947-55)