The strange, the bizarre and the unexpected
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I just saw TRISKAIDEKAPHOBIA (and -PHOBIC) for the first time in a long time. (Fear of the number 13.) For the hell of it, I tried FRIGGATRISKAIDEKAPHOBIA (just because it was there) and to my surprise it worked. Turns out that's a fear of Friday the 13th. -
I became curious about words with no vowels some time ago and found this:
https://scrabble.merriam.com/words-without-vowelsLeave a comment:
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currerbell, I'm currently retooling my brain to collect 4x4 records next month (I'll see how long that will last.). At the end of the month I thought I'd try to play 51 games all in one day and see what APPW I can come up with. I got the gold before using my "speed trophy hunting" technique (not many competitors back then though) but it took me 2 days to get 51 games of a high enough pt value which I also knew. I played 3 games today where you were the best word record holder: 12, 14, 18 pts. I couldn't even find the lower scoring words but had no trouble w the 18 pt one. (Apparently there are too many 12-14 pt words for my brain to keep track of.) Congrats on locking down those boards.Leave a comment:
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I just got points for ZINGARO. The only reason I thought of trying it was the Anvil Chorus (Coro di Zingari) from Il Trovatore.Leave a comment:
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I became curious about words with no vowels some time ago and found this:
I was amazed there are so many, although many longer words have a y in them. According to this y is a vowel sometimes and sometimes not (I recall from elementary school the vowel list: a, e, i, o, u and sometimes y. But I was never taught why it's sometimes y.)
https://www.merriam-webster.com/word...%20or%20beyondLast edited by rsneha; 08-29-2022, 12:31 AM.Leave a comment:
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I have seen it used: I read that word in a sentence something like this: "The sausage casing was filled with ground snouts and anuses."Leave a comment:
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I once had a discussion with a native Serbian speaker. She told me that in school she was told that S and R are also vowels, and pointed out that they could be used that way in English as well -- you could pronounce them to connect consonants with no trouble at all. Her example, if I remember it correctly, was "Srpska". Anyone can say it despite the lack of any "vowels" in the first five letters.
Russ, you're welcome.Last edited by lalatan; 07-30-2021, 01:40 AM.Leave a comment:
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The Scrabble link is a great find lalatan. Plan to print this out and memorize as many as I can with the hope they are accepted on Wordtwist. CRWTH and PSST are accepted. I was really surprised there are so many! Thanks for posting.
Cheers,
RussLeave a comment:
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I once had a discussion with a native Serbian speaker. She told me that in school she was told that S and R are also vowels, and pointed out that they could be used that way in English as well -- you could pronounce them to connect consonants with no trouble at all. Her example, if I remember it correctly, was "Srpska". Anyone can say it despite the lack of any "vowels" in the first five letters.
Leave a comment:
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I was amazed there are so many, although many longer words have a y in them. According to this y is a vowel sometimes and sometimes not (I recall from elementary school the vowel list: a, e, i, o, u and sometimes y. But I was never taught why it's sometimes y.)
https://www.merriam-webster.com/word...%20or%20beyondLast edited by lalatan; 07-29-2021, 01:08 PM.Leave a comment:
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I call Obi Wan Kenobi (the dog), Doobie for short...I don't think the offspring know the vernacular...Leave a comment:
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I always get a chuckle out of DOOB, DOOBS, DOOBIE, and DOOBIES. All available on the same board if you find it........
I also like CRWTH and PSST which as far as I know are the only 4+ letter English words without a vowel.
SHH and HMM are the only 3 letter words I know of without a vowel but I don't play 4 x 4 so I don't ever use these.
NTH might also work on 4 x 4.Last edited by RussDNails; 07-28-2021, 09:32 PM.Leave a comment:
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