Crazy English
From
Gleb Hlebov@2:5023/24.4222 to
All on Wed Nov 29 13:09:38 2023
Date: 01-12-91
From: DALE DAY ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here's a pop quiz for all writers (courtesy, "Crazy English"
by, Richard Lederer, Pocket Books, 1989):
What do the following words mean:
1. ANTEBELLUM
a. against women
b. against war
c. after the war
d. before the war
2. APIARY
a. school for mimics
b. place where apes are kept
c. place where bees are kept
d. cupboard for peas
3. AQUILINE
a. resembling an eagle
b. relating to water
c. relating to synchronized swimming
d. resembling a porcupine
4. CUPIDITY
a. strong desire for wealth
b. strong desire for love
c. strong desire for amusement parks
d. obtuseness
5. DISINTERESTED
a. lacking a bank account
b. unbiased
c. bored
d. lacking rest
6. ENORMITY
a. great wickedness
b. great size
c. normal state
d. cowardice
7. FORESTRESS
a. ancient hair style
b. female forester
c. dread anticipation
d. emphasis on first part of word
8. FRIABLE
a. easily crumbled
b. easily fried
c. unhealthy
d. relating to holy orders
9. HERPETOLOGY - the study of
a. herbs
b. herpes
c. female pets
d. reptiles
10. HIPPOPHOBIA - the fear of
a. hippopotami
b. horses
c. getting fat
d. hippies
11. INFINITESIMAL
a. very small
b. very large
c. relating to intestines
d. hesitant
12. INFLAMMABLE
a. calm
b. incredulous
c. not easily set on fire
d. easily set on fire
13. INGENUOUS
a. insincere
b. innocent
c. clever
d. mentally dull
14. MERETRICIOUS
a. falsely attractive
b. worthy
c. good tasting
d. diseased
15. PRESENTLY
a. generous with gifts
b. now
c. soon
d. presidentially
16. PROSODY - the study of
a. drama
b. music
c. prose
d. versification
17. RESTIVE
a. serene
b. festive
c. fidgety
d. pensive
18. RISIBLE
a. disposed to laugh
b. easily lifted
c. fertile
d. relating to dawn
19. TOOTHSOME
a. displaying prominent teeth
b. missing teeth
c. palatable
d. serrated
20. VOTARY
a. democratic country
b. enthusiast
c. electoral college
d. revolving tool
answers in a few days. This is one of the funniest books on English
I've read!
-+-
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Reality Check 415-474-2602
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From
Gleb Hlebov@2:5023/24.4222 to
All on Fri Dec 1 14:59:08 2023
Hello, All!
Here's one more excerpt found among some old BBS textfiles.
So... Have you foreigners ever heard a word
"titmouse"?
Until now I must confess I haven't.
So, upon seeing a bunch of those, how are you supposed to say:
"A flock of titmice"? Or, simply "A flock of tits"?
:-)
=========================================================================== From: DALE DAY
Excerpts from "Crazy English" by Richard Lederer (Pocket Books 1989)
Nonetheless, it is now time to face the fact that English is a
crazy language.
In the crazy English language, the blackbird hen is brown,
blackboards can be blue or green, and blackberries are green and then
red before they are ripe. Even if blackberries were really black and blueberries really blue, what are strawberries, cranberries, elderberries, huckleberries, raspberries, boysenberries, and gooseberries supposed to
look like?
To add to the insanity, there is no butter in buttermilk, no egg in eggplant, neither worms nor wood in wormwood, neither pine nor apple in pineapple, and no ham in a hamburger. (In fact, if somebody invented a
sandwich consisting of a ham patty in a bun, we would have a hard time
finding a name for it.) To make matters worse, English muffins weren't
invented in England, french fries in France, or Danish pastries in Denmark.
And we discover even more culinary madness in the revelations that sweet-
meat is made from fruit, while sweetbread, which isn't sweet, is made from meat.
In this unreliable English tongue, greyhounds aren't always grey (or
gray), ladybugs and fireflies are beetles, a panda bear is a raccoon, a
koala bear is a maruspial, a guinea pig is neither a pig nor from Guinea,
and a titmouse is neither mammal nor mammaried.
...
Why is it that a woman can man a station but a man can't woman one,
that a man can father a movement but a woman can't mother one, and that a
king rules a kingdom but a queen doesn't rule a queendom? How did all those Renaissance men reproduce when there doesn't seem to have been any
Reniassance women?
A writer is someone who writes, and a stinger is something that stings.
But fingers don't fing, grocers don't groce, hammers don't ham, and hum- dingers don't hum. If the plural of tooth is teeth, shouldn't the plural of booth be beeth? One goose, two geese - so one moose, two meese? One index,
two indices - one Kleenex, two Klennices? If people ring a bell today and
rang a bell yesterday, why don't we say that they flang a ball? If they wrote
a letter perhaps they also bote their tongue. If the teacher taught, why
isn't it also true that the preacher praught? Why is it that the sun shone yesterday while I shined my shoes, that I treaded water and then trod on
soil, and that I flew out to see a World Series game in which my favorite player flied out?
<And we wonder why others find English so hard to learn?>
Again, courtesy of my wife's English teacher, Mr. Gomez
-+-
■ Via ProDoor 3.4ßR The Home Place BBS - Las Vegas - node 1
■ ILink ■ The Home Place BBS ■ Las Vegas, Nevada ■ 702-641-5624
Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
& the Temple of the Screaming Electron 415-935-5845
Just Say Yes 415-922-1613
Rat Head 415-524-3649
Cheez Whiz 408-363-9766
Reality Check 415-474-2602
Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
arcane knowledge, political extremism, diversive sexuality,
insane speculation, and wild rumours. ALL-TEXT BBS SYSTEMS.
Full access for first-time callers. We don't want to know who you are,
where you live, or what your phone number is. We are not Big Brother.
"Raw Data for Raw Nerves" =======================================================================
WBR, Gleb <Fri 01-12-2023 14:57>
--- GoldED+/W64-MSVC 1.1.5
* Origin: Type <sadm> to continue (2:5023/24.4222)
From
Anton Shepelev@2:221/6 to
Gleb Hlebov on Sat Dec 2 14:12:42 2023
Gleb Hlebov to Anton Shepelev:
Here's a pop quiz for all writers (courtesy, "Crazy
English" by, Richard Lederer, Pocket Books, 1989):
[...]
Those are easy for anyone acquainted with the standard
Latin prefixes, suffixes, and /some/ roots widely used
in English.
You're not a university professor, are you?
Not at all. There are not many Latin roots in wide use, and
one will easily remember them if one will only read rich
English and, while consulting a dictionalry, pay head not
only to the meaning, but also to the etymology and
morphology. The only way to miss those words is be ignoring
all the most recent English prose. Try some Lovecraft,
Ashton Smith, Machen, Poe, Gregory Lewis, Melville, (Ann)
Radcliffe, (Emily) Bronte, or any other good writer, but
make sure to avoid anything after 1940, or skip the 20th
sentury altogether to be safe.
There's a good half of them that got me confused. :-)
Well, that "female forester" one definitely did. If
there would be ACTUAL female foresters, how were they
called, then?
Simply `forester', accoridng to the old law that the
masculine principle embraces the feminine.
---
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