Hapax Legomenon
A hapax legomenon is the archaelogical translator's curse,
a new word or phrase which occurs only once in a text. Such words are
notoriously difficult to interpret, since in many cases, a word's
meaning in an unknown language can best be determined by examining
its context.
Here, however, I simply want to record the occurrence of a few
memorable nonce words, catchwords, and other alphabetic formulations.
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Annyong, a minor character in the TV show "Arrested
Development", a Korean child adopted by the Bluth family,
whose name was assumed to be Annyong, because that's all he
ever said in response to any question. It turns out this is
the Korean for "Hello".
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Aoxomoxoa is the palindromic title of an album by the Grateful
Dead with an exceptionally memorable cover.
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Bftsplk is the last name of Joe Bftsplk, a character in Al Capp's
cartoon "Li'l Abner" who always was portrayed with a dark rain cloud
over his head, as he was the world's worst jinx.
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Coloress green ideas sleep furiously.
Furiously sleep ideas green colorless.
two sentences invented (he hopes) by Noam Chomsky, and claimed to
be examples of the fact that a sentence can be meaningless but
syntactically correct or incorrect. A salient point of his
argument was that, surely, neither sentence had ever previously
been expressed, and hence no one can say that their syntactical
correctness is being judged based on statistical or probabilistic
grounds.
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Croatoan is a word carved into a tree at the deserted
Roanoke colony and discovered by belated rescuers. The fate of
the colonists is unknown, and their mystery subsumed in this
mysterious word.
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Dszquphsbnt! is the title of the cryptograms section of
Games magazine, but why that would be so is a complete cipher.
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Evoe, the cry of the worshippers of Dionysus or Bacchus.
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Excelsior, a Latin word meaning "ever higher", or more
literally, "more heavens-ward". Here, "excelsus" means "upwards:
and "excelsior" is the comparative form. A brand of stuffing
made from wood shavings had this name for a while, and so one
meaning of "excelsior" as now this rather mundane substance.
It is also the title and tagline of a poem by Longfellow, in
which a youth carries a banner proclaiming "Excelsior!",
charges up a mountain, and later is found dead of exposure.
The last line of every stanza is, of course, "Excelsior!",
and in the last stanza, it is spoken by a voice "from the sky",
suggesting that our strange youth in fact achieved his goal.
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ghoti is how George Bernard Shaw claimed you could spell "fish"
in English, using the gh from "enough", the o from
"women", and the ti from "nation".
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grue was an invented word, used, along with bleen (whose
meaning you will have to guess), to
embody a philosophical argument about induction. In the original
discussion by Nelson Goodman, we suppose that the color of various
objects has been observed just once and recorded. We
also have a special time T, sometimes taken to be 1 January 2000.
We describe an object as grue if its color was observed before
time T, and found to be green, or if its color was observed after
time T and found to be blue. Goodman's intent was to attack the
inductional argument that finding another green opal means that
we have strengthened the case that all opals are green; the same
discovery, made before time T, strengthens the case that all opals
are grue, and yet the consequences, after time T, would be quite
different. The word grue was adopted by others, and the
meaning was modified, perhaps unintentionally, to denote objects
which are green before time T and blue after - that is, that the
color of the object is understood to actually have changed.
This is really a different idea entirely. Meanwhile, linguists have
adopted "grue" to describe languages in which the colors blue and
green are not distinguished.
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Hardw is the presumably truncated name of a store seen
often in B. Kliban cartoons.
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Hodor, moronic hulk in Game of Thrones, who never speaks
except to randomly say his name. His great purpose in life is
later revealed when he heroically (or robotically) saves his
friends by holding shut a door, while shouting triumphantly
"Ho' door, ho' door!" Get it? Was that really worth it?
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Klaatu, Barada Nikto is the message that the dying alien
Klaatu tells the earthboy to deliver to the robot Gort, so that
it will not destroy the earth, in "The Day the Earth Stood Still".
Somewhat diluting its hapax legomenonal status, though, the phrase
showed up again in "Army of Darkness", a movie about a man
sent back a medieval era infested with zombies. At one point,
he is told by wise men to deliver this same phrase. (Apparently,
it's also appeared on The Monkees, on Alice Cooper's "School's Out",
"Close Encounters of the Third Kind", "The Rockford Files", "Tron",
And then,
of course, there was the band Klaatu...
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Lorem Ipsum is a piece of stock text used by printers to display
their fonts or layouts or printing styles. The text is intended to be
meaningless, while looking typical. The text has been used in this
format for over 500 years. The original text was extracted, somewhat
haphazardly, from passages in a work by Cicero, 'de Finibus Bonorum
et Malorum' (on the Extremes of Good and Evil). In particular, the
opening phrase Lorem ipsum was pulled from Cicero's line
"Neque porro quisquam est, qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor
sit amet, consectetur, adipisci velit..."
(There is no one who loves pain itself, who seeks after it,
and wants to have it, simply because it is pain.)
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Mr Mxyptlk is a goofy magical bowler-hatted pixie from
another dimension who teases and torments Superman, and can only
be sent back home by tricking him into saying his name backwards.
Since even saying it forwards is a challenge, we leave the details
to Namrepus!
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Nevermore: so quoth the Raven;
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Niagara Falls!: the punchline of an obscure bit, sometimes
called "Slowly I turned", often performed by the Three Stooges,
as in "Gents without Cents". The key phrase is
"Slowly I turned, step by step, inch by inch - Niagara Falls!".
The point of the bit is that
a person happens to be extremely sensitive to the trigger words
"Niagara Falls". At their mention, he repeats the entire phrase,
and then attacks the person who used the words. In comedy,
the first occurrence is surprising, the second explanatory, then
a third person enters and asks what is wrong and the sequence is
inevitably repeated. Variations of this joke have been used
by Abbott and Costello, Lucille Ball, Danny Thomas, Milton Berle,
Steve Martin, and Monty Python.
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Notary Sojac was a phrase which popped up from time to time
in the cartoon strip "Smokey Stover". I recall one case where it
appeared in a certificate hanging on a wall, and assumed that this
was some kind of official position. However, the phrase was never
explained.
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Oobleck, what rained down on Bartholomew Cubbins after the king
requested a form of precipitation more interesting than rain or snow;
invented by Dr Seuss (Theodore Geisel) early enough in his career that
he wasn't merely demonstrating his ability to spout cute nonsense;
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Panjandrum comes from a nonsense text devised by Samuel Foote
as a challenge of the claimed ability of an actor named Charles
Macklin to memorize a text after a single reading.
The text, now known as "The Gran Panjandrum" goes as follows:
So she went into the garden to cut a cabbage-leaf to make an
apple-pie; and at the same time a great she-bear, coming up the
street, pops its head into the shop. "What! No soap?" So he died,
and she very imprudently married the barber; and there were present
the Picninnies, and the Joblillies, and the Garyulies, and the
grand Panjandrum himself, with the little round button at top,
and they all fell to playing the game of catch as catch can till
the gunpowder ran out at the heels of their boots.
The nonsense word "Panjandrum" soon acquired the sense of "an
important person" or "self-important person" or "ridiculously
self-important person".
-
Plastics! was the one word of advice given to Benjamin in
The Graduate, and then taken as a damning indictment of
the materialism and careerism of the 1960's.
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Pompatus is a nonsense word that occurs in Steve Miller's song
"The Joker", and has been a famous puzzle for years. The word is also
transcribed as pompatous and pompitous. Steve Miller
had no explanation for the meaning of the word, which occurs in his
lyrics as
Some people call me the space cowboy,
Some people call me the gangster of love,
Some people call me Maurice,
Cause I speak of the pompatus of love.
According to Cecil Adams in his "The Straight Dope" column, however,
Miller had likely borrowed from a song called "The Letter" by
Vernon Green, which had the lines
Oh my darling, let me whisper sweet words of pizmotality,
And discuss the puppetutes of love.
Green said he'd coined the words, and that "pizmotality" referred to
words of such secrecy they could only be shared with a loved one,
while "puppetutes" referred to a puppet-like fantasy love object
who would be his everything.
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Potrzebie, a word which the writers of Mad Magazine would
merrily daub here and there throughout the issues, with never an
explanation of its meaning. Donald Knuth actually contributed
an article to Mad which was published as "The Potrzebie System
of Weights and Measures". The word is of Polish origin, but was
simply adopted for its humorous potential.
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Rache written in blood on a wall in a room where a dead man lay,
in "A Study in Scarlet", and thought by Inspector Lestrade to be an
unfinished invocation of the name "Rachel", presumably the incitement
of the murder. The word is actually German for "Revenge", and was
intended, by the murderer, as a false clue.
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Rosebud, the bathetic secret behind Citizen Kane's life,
nothing more than his name for a favorite sled. You are free to
ask whether this distracts from the unwatchableness of a movie
saddled with the honorific of the greatest movie ever made,
or to remind me that rosebud was supposedly Hearst's
nickname for something naughty, in which case, so what?
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Sockdolager, which means something conclusive, or stunning or
remarkable or unique, was a punch line in "Our American Cousin",
and was the cue for which John Wilkes Booth waited before rushing
into Lincoln's theater compartment and shooting him, relying on the
laughter of the audience to provide a distraction. The actual line
from the play was
"Well, I guess I know enough to turn you inside out, you
sockdologising old man-trap!"
and while it may have had some local currency back then, this is
surely about the only setting in which most people will run across
this word any more!
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squeamish ossifrage. In August 1977, Martin Gardner published
in his Scientific American column the first description of the RSA
encryption scheme, along with a challenge to his readers to decipher
a phrase. The encrypted phrase, whose decipherment was announced
on 26 April 1994, was
"The magic words are squeamish ossifrage."
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Zotz! was a word which could be used as an incantation
to drastically slow down the motion of all other creatures.
The playful use of this word was explored in a book of the same
name by Walter Karig, and then a movie starring Tom Poston.
Last modified on 27 June 2014.