Words. I love words. I have always enjoyed playing with words --- stringing them into sentences, paragraphs, verses, poems, essays, stories, and (someday) into novels.
I love the sound of them on my lips. It’s so much fun forming them by puckering your lips or opening your mouth wide or baring your teeth in a wide grin-like way or by rolling your tongue!
I love discovering new words --- their meanings and their etymology. I even love coming up with my own words! Who knows? Maybe one day one of my new words makes its way into Webster’s or
Anyhoo… I have a whole bunch of favorite words like odious (which means hateful or abhorrent) because of the way it sounds when you say it. So hoity-toity, snooty, and nasal. Very Regency English. It’s fun! “What an odious man he is, don’t you think so?”
Then, there’s bollocks (which actually means to make a mess of or to destroy, but has become some sort of British expletive), and bullocks (which means castrated bull in plural form). And either of them can be made into expletives! How lovely is that?
How about tizzy (which means to be in a state of nervous agitation or confusion) and titter (which, to those with less lascivious minds, actually means a high-pitched giggle)? Putting both words in the same sentence makes me grin. “She was tizzy enough to make her titter at every little thing that odious man said.”
I can actually go on and on with the words that I love, whether it be for their sound or spelling or meaning, but it would take forever and a day to finish. (When did we switch from etcetera, etcetera to yada, yada, yada? Hmmm… Yada, yada sounds fun though.)
However, there are words (or phrases) that I don’t really like. Take for example, sort of. It’s never quite there, is it? Like it is, but it isn’t. It’s such a so-so phrase that gives off a so-so vibe. It’s like it’s got an incomplete thought or something. Sort of. See! It makes me impatient.
Or what about when people use irregardless?! To explain my annoyance with the use of this word, let me quote the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. “Irregardless is a word that many mistakenly believe to be correct usage in formal style, when in fact it is used chiefly in nonstandard speech or casual writing. Coined in the
But really… It’s not just about the words. It’s the power that words have to evoke sentiments, feelings, emotions, thoughts, ideas… greatness! Words, when strung together like beautiful Christmas lights, can move a person to do, to feel, and to think about things. You can wax lyrical or turn prosaic in a matter of seconds just by using the right words.
i hate the word "dollop". i hate the way it makes you feel like throwing up right after you say it. i've hated it for as long as i can remember. bleech!
ReplyDeleteyeah, "dollop" does sound weird. how about "hoyden"? does it give you an image of a boisterous girl or someone about to expel phlegm? i do like the word "knickers" though. hehehehe!
ReplyDeletepag may tinawag kang hoyden sasabihin sa'yo "hoy ka ren!"
ReplyDeleteExcuse my ignorance, pero who is Mr. Darcy?
ReplyDeleteAng kilala ko ay yung illustrator na si Dame D'Arcy pero hindi ko alam itong si Mister.
I also get very peeved with "irregardless". In Tagalog, i can't stand the misuse of the word "sobra".
If you like playing with words and stringing them together to form new ones, then i think you and Salman Rushdie are kindred spirits. Nasisiraan ako ng bait sa mga sulat niya, pero napakahusay niya talaga.
i once counted the number of times my professor used "irregardless" in a 3-hour session... 147! :p i agree... it sounds so annoying.
ReplyDeletealthough I am, definitely, no mr. darcy -for the mere fact that I am a ms :p- I agree with you that I, Love, and You are some of the powerful words in the English language. However, I would like to believe that Thank(s), Sorry, and Please are also in the running for the top spots. Then again, since I am no Mr. Darcy, my opinion shouldn't matter to you ... should it?! :p hehehehe ... yada... yada... yada
ReplyDelete"knickers" makes me feel like it's some game with goals, balls, and a field. strange how words evoke feelings other than their real meanings even if they're just arbitrary symbols. as shakespeare once wrote, a rose by any other name...will still wilt faster than you can say "fuck off" to your unwanted suitor. (hehehe). what a coincidence, i just wrote about words (or more appropriately, lack of them) in my blog today.
ReplyDeletecall me old-fashioned, but i really get annoyed with the use of the word "anyways" in the beginning of sentences or as an expression of resignation or fatalism. adverbs are never plural (or did i miss the memo on that one?).
ReplyDeletemr. darcy is mr. darcy. to some, he may simply be that hero in jane austen's novel, pride and prejudice. to many women, though, he is the measuring stick for mr. right. he's more real than prince charming. and that says a whole lot, don't you think so?
ReplyDeleteAh, salamat. Hindi pa kasi ako nakakabasa ng mga nilikha ni Jane Austen.
ReplyDeleteFor some reason, I hate the word "wherein".
ReplyDelete