things aren’t quite what they seem…

21
Words with a little mystery THINGS AREN’T QUITE WHAT THEY SEEM…

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Things aren’t quite what they seem…. Words with a little mystery. Let’s start with a French term…. Faux (pronounced “foe”). Means fake/false. What is called when…. At a fancy dinner meal, you daintily take a sip out of the “finger bowl.” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Things aren’t quite what they seem…

Words with a little mystery

THINGS AREN’T QUITE WHAT THEY SEEM…

Page 2: Things aren’t quite what they seem…

Let’s start with a French term…

Page 3: Things aren’t quite what they seem…

Faux (pronounced “foe”)•Means fake/false

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What is called when…• At a fancy dinner meal, you daintily take a sip out of the “finger

bowl.”• You show up to a Packer’s party in an old Favre jersey.• You go to a job interview in a shirt that says, “I’m not dumb, just

lazy.”• You dog-ear your book to keep your place, only to see that the

author is sitting right next to you.• You are so busy texting during a wedding ceremony that you are

the only one not standing when the bride comes down the aisle.• You are still wearing “saggy pants” when they clearly went out of

style about 5 years ago.• You start making fun of your teacher’s outfit, only to discover that

she’s right behind you.

These are all examples of…

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Faux Pas (translates to “false step”)• An error of manners. It might be an indiscreet comment or an embarrassing social blunder.

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Another root for false: PSEUDO-•WORD TOWER

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PSEUDONYM• “Fake Name”

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What is this called?

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How does this word (metamorphosis) make sense?• Meta:• Morph:

Two other words that contain “meta”:

Five other words that contain “morph or form”:

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Morpheus• Greek God: “Shaper of Dreams”

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Amorphous

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Anthropomorphism

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Prefixes:• uniform=• deform=• Inform=• reform=• conform=

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Spooner (from “Ordinary Finds”)• The Reverend William Archibald

Spooner is a big hero, not for his noble deeds, nor for his good work at New College in Oxford - but for being a trail-blazer among tongue-twisters, coining numerous, so-called spoonerisms in his attempt to have his tongue keep up with his racing brain…• Spooner, who also was an

albino and a sufferer of poor eye-sight, was born July 22, 1844 (d. 1930). Photos of him are scarce, but the National Portrait Gallery in London has the one reproduced above…

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Some of his more famous lines…• "Is it kisstomary to cuss the bride?" (customary to kiss)• "The Lord is a shoving leopard." (a loving shepherd)• "A blushing crow." (crushing blow)• "Three cheers for our queer old dean!" (dear old queen, referring to Queen Victoria)• "A well-boiled icicle" (___________________)• "You were fighting a liar in the quadrangle." (_______)• "Is the bean dizzy?" (__________)• "Someone is occupewing my pie. Please sew me to another sheet." (___________________________)

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Spoonerisms: Play on words• we'll have the hags flung outwe'll have the flags hung out • you've tasted two wormsyou've wasted two terms • a half-warmed fisha half-formed wish

Rindercella

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Latin Misunderstandings:•Ad-•Means “to”

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Ad hoc• Means: “To this”.

• It refers to something improvised/put together in a hurry. Example: We formed an ad hoc panel to address the problem of H1N1 last year.

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Ad Infinitum• Means “to forever/without limit”• A savings account should earn interest ad infinitum.

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Ad Nauseam• Means: “to sickness/to a ridiculous degree” (Watch the spelling)