[Poll #1100080]
I was something like thirty-eight when I had a sudden insight that these words might be related. I felt phenomenally stupid for not having seen it before. It's not like I've never studied a Romance language or somehow never in my life encountered that scent for soap.
Then I started telling friends, and so far, they've all responded with variants of "What do you mean, obvious? How the @#$! would you come up with something like that? Weirdo."
This is the kind of thing I wonder about a lot. Is there any relationship between the endings of "lavender" and "provender"? How many pairs of words used to follow the pattern "bear"/"birth" (verb -> vowel change + "th" -> noun) before we dropped those usages, and just how much does "death" count as one of the last remaining examples? If a pantler had charge of the pantry (bread = pan), and a hostler worked at a hostelry, did a butler (bottles, wine) ever at any time in the language have anything like a "butry", and are "gentry" or "gantry" even remotely related to this pattern?
Um, sorry, I'm just kind of like this. :-)
I was something like thirty-eight when I had a sudden insight that these words might be related. I felt phenomenally stupid for not having seen it before. It's not like I've never studied a Romance language or somehow never in my life encountered that scent for soap.
Then I started telling friends, and so far, they've all responded with variants of "What do you mean, obvious? How the @#$! would you come up with something like that? Weirdo."
This is the kind of thing I wonder about a lot. Is there any relationship between the endings of "lavender" and "provender"? How many pairs of words used to follow the pattern "bear"/"birth" (verb -> vowel change + "th" -> noun) before we dropped those usages, and just how much does "death" count as one of the last remaining examples? If a pantler had charge of the pantry (bread = pan), and a hostler worked at a hostelry, did a butler (bottles, wine) ever at any time in the language have anything like a "butry", and are "gentry" or "gantry" even remotely related to this pattern?
Um, sorry, I'm just kind of like this. :-)
no subject
I'm almost frustrated by the etymology related to livid. It seems like a much weaker link, in terms of phonemes, than lavare (especially if you take into account the Italian lavanda, "a washing"). Since the dictionaries go ahead and reference lavanda as a "related" word, why is the link with livid considered stronger? This fascinates me.
Thank you for more information on flat base puzzles. I followed the previous link and didn't clue in. Would the puzzle be posed simply as this poem? Would the "BEHEADMENT(5, *4) (*4 = not M-W)" label be included? Does the four-letter proper noun have to rhyme with cold?
no subject
The tagging and enumeration appear above the poem, where the title usually goes. And, yes, the poem and its tagging and enumeration are usually all you get. (The main exceptions are what we call rebuses -- which are not what most people call rebuses -- and their derived types. Those have a "rubric" as well as the poem.)
Does the four-letter proper noun have to rhyme with cold?
No, the cuewords have to scan and rhyme in context but the solution words do not have to do either.
There's a more detailed explanation along with a "mini-sample" issue of The Enigma at the National Puzzlers' League website (http://www.puzzlers.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=mini:start), if you're interested.
no subject
(I think I've solved that one... FINALLY. Much as I love words, word-game puzzles have an incredible ability to make me feel like the slow child at the back of the classroom.)
Thanks!
no subject