digging this today…

Posted by Stacey on Thursday Mar 19, 2009 Under Music, video

the tilt-shift is especially very cool.

Tags : | Comments Off

risible

Posted by Stacey on Tuesday Mar 10, 2009 Under learnin'

definitions from the OED:

RISIBLE [riz-uh-buhl]

A. adj.

1. Having the faculty or power of laughing; inclined or given to laughter.

1557 NORTH Gueuara’s Diall Pr. 80b, A creature the which, by nature, was sociable, communicable, and risyble. 1606 J. CARPENTER Solomon’s Solace xxxvii. 145 That honest and lawful ioy..incident to mans nature, whereof, he is called a risible creature. 1654 Z. COKE Logick 123 A man is risible, and every risible thing is a man. 1731 A. HILL Advice to Poets Epist. p. x, What must risible Foreigners have thought of the Court of King William? 1771 SMOLLETT Humph. Cl. (1806) VI. 51 He is the most risible misanthrope I ever met with.

2. Pertaining to, or used in, laughter.

1747 RICHARDSON Clarissa (1811) I. 188 His muscles have never yet been able to recover a risible tone. 1754 Connoisseur No. 1 3 He has gain’d such an entire conquest over the risible muscles, that he hardly vouchsafes at any time to smile. 1809 W. IRVING Knickerb. (1820) 106 The Dutch negroes at Communipaw, who..are famous for their risible powers. 1820 H. MATTHEWS Diary Invalid (ed. 2) 451 The cricket was too much for his risible nerves. 1862 C. STRETTON Chequered Life II. 134 So totally had he lost all control over his risible faculties.

3. Capable of exciting laughter; laughable, ludicrous, comical.

1727 LADY M. W. MONTAGU Lett. cxlvi. IV. 173 There is something extremely risible in these affairs. 1755 Man No. 6. 2 The risible subjects are either real or apparent absurdities. 1789 BURNEY Hist. Mus. III. x. 577 The jokes though not of the most..refined sort are extremely queer and risible. 1824 J. GILCHRIST Etym. Interpr. 107 Foreigners..get laughed at as if they were guilty of some risible blunder. 1884 BIRRELL Obiter Dicta 194 The mental toilet of most of us is..almost as risible as was that of this savage Court.

absol. 1784 New Spect. No. 7. 3 Exhibiting the serious and the risible in many points of view.

B. n. pl. The risible faculties or muscles (see A. 2). Chiefly U.S.

1785 M. CUTLER in Life, etc. (1888) II. 227 Your account..has distorted my risibles and given my sides a hearty shake. 1866 Athenæum 864/3 His risibles were much affected. 1873 WHITNEY Oriental & Ling. Stud. 127 If the risibles of classical philologers are so easily provoked.

Hence risibleness, ‘laughing faculty’ (Bailey, vol. II, 1727); risibly adv., ‘in a risible manner; laughably’ (Webster, 1847).

Tags : | Comments Off

pecunia non olet

Posted by Stacey on Tuesday Mar 10, 2009 Under learnin'

money has no smell…

Tags : | Comments Off