Tears Nole Tears (“Offcial”)

Thank you. 1,000 times over, thank you.

I learned this fact in my high school Latin class, over 40 years ago. My teacher had started a daily routine where we learned 2 new vocabulary words every day, as well as the etymology of those words. It was supposed to help us with the SAT scores, but I only got a 740. On Verbal.

Anyhow, SHE told us that pusillanimous is what gave rise to "*****" as an insulting word to describe someone's cowardice and lack of toughness.

And this is why I love using the word. People think I'm trying to be vulgar, when I'm really paying tribute to the word pusillanimous.
Plus...... it's fun to say! :ROFLMAO:
 
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Last year Trish, the office manager, got us all word of the day desk calendars. I have no idea where she got them, but they had such gems as:
pusillanimous
pulchritudinous
callipygian
bathykolpian
sesquipedalian
Man, can't you just see @TheOriginalCane just flipping through the days after he opened it saying "know that one, know that one, know that one, that's an easy one, know that one...."????
 
Man, can't you just see @TheOriginalCane just flipping through the days after he opened it saying "know that one, know that one, know that one, that's an easy one, know that one...."????


Pulchritudinous comes from the Latin adjective "pulcher", which in the feminine form is "pulchra", meaning beautiful.

Next up is my personal favorite, since in addition to TAKING Latin, I also went to Latin competitions (yes, I was very geeky in high school), and one of my competitive categories was GREEK deriviatives. And "callipygian" happens to come from Greek and refers to "beautifully shaped buttocks". I'm just going to let that reality settle in.

Bathykolpian is also from the Greek, meaning large-breasted. Again, take a deep breath...

Finally, sesquipedalian comes from Latin and has come to mean "overly verbose" (guilty as charged), but its LITERAL meaning in Latin was "a foot and a half long".

Having reviewed the evidence, I strongly suspect that Trish The Office Manager was trying to proposition @Felonious Monk in a verbal and/or sexual manner, and should be reported to the HR Department immediately...
 
Pulchritudinous comes from the Latin adjective "pulcher", which in the feminine form is "pulchra", meaning beautiful.

Next up is my personal favorite, since in addition to TAKING Latin, I also went to Latin competitions (yes, I was very geeky in high school), and one of my competitive categories was GREEK deriviatives. And "callipygian" happens to come from Greek and refers to "beautifully shaped buttocks". I'm just going to let that reality settle in.

Bathykolpian is also from the Greek, meaning large-breasted. Again, take a deep breath...

Finally, sesquipedalian comes from Latin and has come to mean "overly verbose" (guilty as charged), but its LITERAL meaning in Latin was "a foot and a half long".

Having reviewed the evidence, I strongly suspect that Trish The Office Manager was trying to proposition @Felonious Monk in a verbal and/or sexual manner, and should be reported to the HR Department immediately...
<Quagmire enters the chat>

This one time, at band camp, er Latin camp, I tried jamming my Sesquipedalian schmeckle in the pulchra of this sassy bathykolpian babe only to be escorted to Trish the Office Managers office for an overly verbose oral lecture that I turned into my greatest trivium experience of my life!
Giggity

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Pulchritudinous comes from the Latin adjective "pulcher", which in the feminine form is "pulchra", meaning beautiful.

Next up is my personal favorite, since in addition to TAKING Latin, I also went to Latin competitions (yes, I was very geeky in high school), and one of my competitive categories was GREEK deriviatives. And "callipygian" happens to come from Greek and refers to "beautifully shaped buttocks". I'm just going to let that reality settle in.

Bathykolpian is also from the Greek, meaning large-breasted. Again, take a deep breath...

Finally, sesquipedalian comes from Latin and has come to mean "overly verbose" (guilty as charged), but its LITERAL meaning in Latin was "a foot and a half long".

Having reviewed the evidence, I strongly suspect that Trish The Office Manager was trying to proposition @Felonious Monk in a verbal and/or sexual manner, and should be reported to the HR Department immediately...

Austin Powers Nerd GIF
 
Noles have Ashton Daniels as their QB. 5 wins will be their ceiling. I have them with 4 wins. Maybe they get lucky like they did v Bama last year. But on 9 out of 10 Saturdays, they're not beating NC State or SMU.

Daniels stats per ESPN:

View attachment 358232

That TD to INT ratio of 24 — 22 (over 3 years) for their QB Daniels is impressive.
 
Pulchritudinous comes from the Latin adjective "pulcher", which in the feminine form is "pulchra", meaning beautiful.

Next up is my personal favorite, since in addition to TAKING Latin, I also went to Latin competitions (yes, I was very geeky in high school), and one of my competitive categories was GREEK deriviatives. And "callipygian" happens to come from Greek and refers to "beautifully shaped buttocks". I'm just going to let that reality settle in.

Bathykolpian is also from the Greek, meaning large-breasted. Again, take a deep breath...

Finally, sesquipedalian comes from Latin and has come to mean "overly verbose" (guilty as charged), but its LITERAL meaning in Latin was "a foot and a half long".

Having reviewed the evidence, I strongly suspect that Trish The Office Manager was trying to proposition @Felonious Monk in a verbal and/or sexual manner, and should be reported to the HR Department immediately...
She is very good friends with Mrs. Monk. I would not be surprised to hear that they picked out the office gifts on a shopping trip together. I doubt it was a proposition. Unless... Oh!

Would GIF by hamlet
 
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