Friday, January 29, 2010

Only a competitive scrabble player...

could study a word, even play it in a game half a dozen times, and still not know what it means.

My wife told me about a company website she was working on today, Etesian Technologies.. of course I said, 'wait, you mean E-T-E-S-I-A-N? cool!' I was going to explain to her that it could be formed from TISANE plus E, considered by many to be the top 6 letter bingo stem, but I don't think she shared my enthusiasm.

And then I realized I had no idea what etesian meant. So here it is:

ETESIAN an annually recurring wind. (pl. -S)

I don't think I would have known it took an S... good to learn!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

-WORT words

I think I only knew two of these....

AWLWORT          
BELLWORT        
COLEWORT        
DAMEWORT
DANEWORT
DROPWORT
FANWORT
FELWORT
FIGWORT
FLEAWORT 
HONEWORT
HORNWORT

*inhales deeply*

LEADWORT
LUNGWORT
MADWORT
MILKWORT
MOONWORT
MOORWORT
MUGWORT
PILEWORT
RAGWORT
RIBWORT
SALTWORT
SANDWORT
SOAPWORT
STARWORT

time for some more flashcards...

Monday, January 18, 2010

BIDI WADI

I'm always intrigued when I find out that a word I've known (in Scrabble) for a while has another spelling, or has a group of words that are similar to it. Most recently, I was reviewing a game someone posted and found that BIDI, a word I learned early on when I was looking for ways to get rid of two I's at once, could be spelled BEEDI. Here are some BEEDIS to the right ....


On the 'similar words' note, I just learned that in addition to WADI (the bed of a usually dry watercourse) being a word, there is also:
WADDY     to strike with a thick club
WADDIE    a cowboy
WADDIED (past tense of waddy)
WADDIES (could be either one)


For a more common set of words, you could put a C on the front of these...

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Another link...

Hey all, if you're on Facebook, you can become a fan of WORD UP by clicking here.

The link is also now in the 'links' section. I'm clever like that.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Dream Extension...

I'm stealing this one from a guy from my local scrabble club... he mentioned it after I emailed him a link to this entry. (He actually played that word against me, and I sort of yelled at him. Not because I was upset that he bingoed, but because I was hoping to play the word against someone first.) But I digress.

Have the word GUTTER on the board?
OK, do you have HIINPSS on your rack?

Definition of the noun form of this word is :
a person belonging to or characteristic of the lowest social group in a city

Monday, January 4, 2010

ROTL

You may think I accidentally tried to text message someone instead of typing a title for this entry, but it's actually:

ROTL  a unit of weight in Muslim countries. [n. ROTLS or ARTAL]

Of interest: the plural form, ARTAL, takes a front hook of H, and has 3 anagrams.