Bazinga. I know it's not a real word but it's pretty useful. If I had to pick a real word, It'd probably be Jabrone.
Haha I do this too! I also like to throw in a few "yes, quite, of courses" in there as well.SteewpidZombie said:My favorite word to say is 'Indeed' in a Posh and British accent when I agree with something.
Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually refers to windows, as in the placement and structure thereof; not of throwing people into them. Likewise, if something is fenestrated, it has windows or openings, usually many of them.Jaime_Wolf said:If by sound:
"Elegance" has always been one of my favourites. The sounds seem to really fit the concept to me.
If by "wait, there's actually a unique word for that?":
"Fenestrate". Every kid who's heard of the Defenestration of Prague knows that that "defenestration" is one of the better weird words lying around in the dustier corners of English, but "fenestration" is just absurd. Being thrown out of a window is one thing and we see it happen often enough in fiction alone to make the word slightly reasonable, but how often do you see people thrown into windows.
Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually also refers to throwing people in through windows (pretty obviously a backformation from "defenestration"). It's an absurdly rare usage, somewhat unsurprising given how rare "defenestration" already is, but it definitely exists.TehChef said:Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually refers to windows, as in the placement and structure thereof; not of throwing people into them. Likewise, if something is fenestrated, it has windows or openings, usually many of them.Jaime_Wolf said:If by sound:
"Elegance" has always been one of my favourites. The sounds seem to really fit the concept to me.
If by "wait, there's actually a unique word for that?":
"Fenestrate". Every kid who's heard of the Defenestration of Prague knows that that "defenestration" is one of the better weird words lying around in the dustier corners of English, but "fenestration" is just absurd. Being thrown out of a window is one thing and we see it happen often enough in fiction alone to make the word slightly reasonable, but how often do you see people thrown into windows.
OnT: I like the word rhotacism. It means the excessive use of the letter "R". And I also like the word bifurcate.
I too would like to see that word used more often in general conversation.MasterOfWorlds said:I like the word "clusterfuck" it's just fun to say, but I don't really get to use it in conversations much. XD
Really? Then that's a usage I've never heard before. So as not to seem like a smart-ass, I checked it against dictionary.com and they had no usage of it as a verb. I'm not trying to quibble, but it must be incredibly rare. Besides, I would think the verb form to be fenestrate, not fenestration. The latter just sounds like an adjective or noun.Jaime_Wolf said:Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually also refers to throwing people in through windows (pretty obviously a backformation from "defenestration"). It's an absurdly rare usage, somewhat unsurprising given how rare "defenestration" already is, but it definitely exists.TehChef said:Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually refers to windows, as in the placement and structure thereof; not of throwing people into them. Likewise, if something is fenestrated, it has windows or openings, usually many of them.Jaime_Wolf said:If by sound:
"Elegance" has always been one of my favourites. The sounds seem to really fit the concept to me.
If by "wait, there's actually a unique word for that?":
"Fenestrate". Every kid who's heard of the Defenestration of Prague knows that that "defenestration" is one of the better weird words lying around in the dustier corners of English, but "fenestration" is just absurd. Being thrown out of a window is one thing and we see it happen often enough in fiction alone to make the word slightly reasonable, but how often do you see people thrown into windows.
OnT: I like the word rhotacism. It means the excessive use of the letter "R". And I also like the word bifurcate.
Preface: It sounds like you might not need this, but it never hurts to repeat it for others (so if you don't need this, don't take my exasperation personally). Also, I need an image macro for this or something given how often I have to say it here.TehChef said:Really? Then that's a usage I've never heard before. So as not to seem like a smart-ass, I checked it against dictionary.com and they had no usage of it as a verb. I'm not trying to quibble, but it must be incredibly rare. Besides, I would think the verb form to be fenestrate, not fenestration. The latter just sounds like an adjective or noun.Jaime_Wolf said:Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually also refers to throwing people in through windows (pretty obviously a backformation from "defenestration"). It's an absurdly rare usage, somewhat unsurprising given how rare "defenestration" already is, but it definitely exists.TehChef said:Eh, not quite. Fenestration actually refers to windows, as in the placement and structure thereof; not of throwing people into them. Likewise, if something is fenestrated, it has windows or openings, usually many of them.Jaime_Wolf said:If by sound:
"Elegance" has always been one of my favourites. The sounds seem to really fit the concept to me.
If by "wait, there's actually a unique word for that?":
"Fenestrate". Every kid who's heard of the Defenestration of Prague knows that that "defenestration" is one of the better weird words lying around in the dustier corners of English, but "fenestration" is just absurd. Being thrown out of a window is one thing and we see it happen often enough in fiction alone to make the word slightly reasonable, but how often do you see people thrown into windows.
OnT: I like the word rhotacism. It means the excessive use of the letter "R". And I also like the word bifurcate.