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Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Thu Aug 14, 2014 3:18 am
by Terra
CatDoom wrote:
Matrix wrote:In video games, usually MMORPGs, 'adds' are mobs spawned in the middle of a boss fight.
"Mob" itself may fit the topic, in the sense of (to quote Wiktionary) "A non-player character [in a video game] that exists to be fought or killed to further the progression of the story or game."
Speaking of "mob", is it a shortening/corruption of "monster"? Or maybe it's from the usual word "mob", but got corrupted to mean "a member of a mob", instead of the mob itself?

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Thu Aug 14, 2014 5:59 am
by KathTheDragon
Terra wrote:Speaking of "mob", is it a shortening/corruption of "monster"? Or maybe it's from the usual word "mob", but got corrupted to mean "a member of a mob", instead of the mob itself?
In my understanding, it's shortened from 'mobile entity'.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Thu Aug 14, 2014 8:02 am
by Terra
KathAveara wrote:
Terra wrote:Speaking of "mob", is it a shortening/corruption of "monster"? Or maybe it's from the usual word "mob", but got corrupted to mean "a member of a mob", instead of the mob itself?
In my understanding, it's shortened from 'mobile entity'.
Interesting. Never heard of that theory or term.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Fri Aug 15, 2014 8:23 am
by sirdanilot
Squib (link); a brief satirical piece of writing or speech. I never heard of this word, but came across it while browsing for classes to follow; one of the examination requirements was to write a 'squib style article'. Never heard of the word before.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 7:16 am
by Astraios
Don't you mean: non-magical person born to wizarding parents.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 11:24 am
by Terra
'squib' reminds me of another:
dud : a bomb/shell that fails to explode;; extended to mean anything that doesn't perform the way that it should/is-expected-to

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 6:28 am
by Dewrad
Terra wrote:
KathAveara wrote:
Terra wrote:Speaking of "mob", is it a shortening/corruption of "monster"? Or maybe it's from the usual word "mob", but got corrupted to mean "a member of a mob", instead of the mob itself?
In my understanding, it's shortened from 'mobile entity'.
Interesting. Never heard of that theory or term.
Wiktionary claims that it is an abbreviation of mobile (vulgus), meaning "fickle crowd".

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 8:30 am
by Neon Fox
Dewrad wrote:
Terra wrote:
KathAveara wrote:
Terra wrote:Speaking of "mob", is it a shortening/corruption of "monster"? Or maybe it's from the usual word "mob", but got corrupted to mean "a member of a mob", instead of the mob itself?
In my understanding, it's shortened from 'mobile entity'.
Interesting. Never heard of that theory or term.
Wiktionary claims that it is an abbreviation of mobile (vulgus), meaning "fickle crowd".
Wiktionary is talking about the common English term for a bunch of angry people, not the computer game term for an AI-controlled monster. It may or may not be correct about the former; KathAveara is correct about the latter.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 9:38 am
by CatDoom
sirdanilot wrote:Squib (link); a brief satirical piece of writing or speech. I never heard of this word, but came across it while browsing for classes to follow; one of the examination requirements was to write a 'squib style article'. Never heard of the word before.
"Squib" also refers to a small firecracker or explosive; I'm most familiar with it's use in film and theater, where the term refers to an explosive, often attached to a bag of artificial blood, which is used to simulate the impact of a bullet.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 9:49 am
by linguoboy
Yesterday I typed "swarf" when I meant to type "dwarf" and discovered it's an actual English word with the technical meaning "the waste chips or shavings from metalworking or a saw cutting wood" or "the grit worn away by use of a grindstone or whetstone, being particles of the material being cut and of the cutting stone itself".

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 10:16 am
by sirdanilot
^ Cognate to dutch zwerf / zwerven ' to roam' / zwerver 'homeless person' ?

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 10:48 am
by Cedh
sirdanilot wrote:^ Cognate to dutch zwerf / zwerven ' to roam' / zwerver 'homeless person' ?
No, those Dutch words are instead cognate to English swerve 'turn aside, deviate from a straight course'. Which is of course an interesting one-syllable word in itself...

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 10:50 am
by sirdanilot
Cedh wrote:
sirdanilot wrote:^ Cognate to dutch zwerf / zwerven ' to roam' / zwerver 'homeless person' ?
No, those Dutch words are instead cognate to English swerve 'turn aside, deviate from a straight course'. Which is of course an interesting one-syllable word in itself...
And swarf isn't cognate to swerve at all? Seems strange to me, since they look alike a lot and have quite similar meanings (something with 'roam or stray from a certain point' ).

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 12:57 pm
by Cedh
sirdanilot wrote:
Cedh wrote:
sirdanilot wrote:^ Cognate to dutch zwerf / zwerven ' to roam' / zwerver 'homeless person' ?
No, those Dutch words are instead cognate to English swerve 'turn aside, deviate from a straight course'. Which is of course an interesting one-syllable word in itself...
And swarf isn't cognate to swerve at all? Seems strange to me, since they look alike a lot and have quite similar meanings (something with 'roam or stray from a certain point' ).
According to Etymonline they're from the same PIE root, so you're right that they're related, but the connection doesn't seem to be especially close.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 3:06 pm
by linguoboy
Cedh wrote:
sirdanilot wrote:And swarf isn't cognate to swerve at all? Seems strange to me, since they look alike a lot and have quite similar meanings (something with 'roam or stray from a certain point' ).
According to Etymonline they're from the same PIE root, so you're right that they're related, but the connection doesn't seem to be especially close.
Really? Isn't OE geswearf just a prefixed o-grade derivation from the verbal stem? (Cf. StG sessen/Gesäß, wenden/Gewand, etc.)

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 3:25 pm
by Cedh
Yes, you're right. I seem to have overlooked the OE meaning in the article on "swerve", sorry.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2014 3:26 pm
by CatDoom
On a mostly unrelated note, I think geswearf is my new favorite word (of the day, anyway). Man I love Old English.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2014 11:13 am
by Thry
Tell me about it. It has the craziest words. I like steorra.

PG is also fun: *dumbaz, *hwazuh

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Sun Aug 31, 2014 12:58 am
by CatDoom
All those final z's do make it look kind of "X-TREME!" I'm tempted to start calling friends "my manniz." :P

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Sun Aug 31, 2014 11:16 am
by ----
ey manniz, hwazuuuuh?
nothingen muchiz

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Sun Aug 31, 2014 11:25 am
by Thry
justaz he2r chillijandz!

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Mon Sep 01, 2014 7:46 am
by Nortaneous

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Mon Sep 01, 2014 9:27 am
by Astraios
Gorse and furze, really? Why not rat and vole and shrew and mouse as well.

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Mon Sep 01, 2014 10:04 am
by Thry
cos less rare I guess

Re: One-syllable words with specific technical or rare meani

Posted: Mon Sep 01, 2014 11:49 am
by Salmoneus
Thry wrote:cos less rare I guess
Gorse vs vole? The former's certainly more common around here.