Insatiable (in-SAY-shuh-bul) -- from the Latin for "not to fill" -- means incapable of being satisfied or appeased.
Example : "Somebody once asked me what qualities I look for in a copywriter. Besides an ability to write, a deep interest in people, and insatiable curiosity, I said that I look for 'a burning desire to take money off people.'"Friday, March 26, 2010
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Winners for the 23rd March 2010 Toastmasters Meeting
Winners for the 23rd March 2010 Toastmasters Meeting
The Language Perfectionist: Unusual Plurals
Headline: "Thirteen state attorney generals threaten lawsuit over Nebraska's health care deal."
The phrase attorney generals isn't wrong. But it's not standard English. The approved form is attorneys general.
This is one of several compounds in which the adjective follows rather than precedes the noun, and where the plural is formed by adding -s to the noun, even though it comes first.
The phenomenon occurs only occasionally in English. Such expressions often strike the ear as archaic or foreign, but their use persists. Usage guru Bryan A. Garner lists two dozen others. Among them:
courts-martial
editors-in-chief
mothers-in-law
notaries public
rights-of-way
An adjective that follows a noun is called a postpositive adjective.Other examples in common use include heir apparent and battle royal. In these cases, too, the plural is formed via the "leading" noun: heirs apparent and battles royal.
Interestingly, attorney-generals is correct in British English. But here in the U.S., stick with attorneys general.
Word of the Day- Enervated
Example : "The moment you feel moody or enervated or apathetic, recognize those feelings as symptoms of an upcoming slump -- and start the three-part cure I've just outlined."
Friday, March 19, 2010
Word of The Day- Captious
Example: "No one likes to be around captious people. Aside from the fact that they take the fun out of things, their negativity can be draining and counterproductive."
Word of The Day- Puissant
Example : "Never ask questions that can be answered with a simple yes or no. That doesn't make for a very puissant interview."
The Language Perfectionist: The Columnist Settles a Dispute
Recently, a grammatical point made in an essay posted on a friend's website generated a spirited disagreement from a reader. My friend asked me to mediate.
The essay told the story of a student who was rebuked by his teacher for saying "He is taller than me." The teacher sternly told him that the sentence should be "He is taller than I."
The reader insisted that "me" is correct, or at least not wrong.
Both the reader and my friend wanted an "authoritative source" for my answer. So I turned to my favorite style guide, Garner's Modern American Usage by Bryan A. Garner.
Garner begins his discussion of the question with this comment: "Traditionally, grammarians have considered than a conjunction, not a preposition...." Thus, the teacher was correct and the sentence should be "He is taller than I." A word is implied, though not stated: "... than I am."
In linguistic circles, this matter has had a surprisingly contentious history. Garner recognizes the contrary position held by a few mavericks who defended the use of "me." But he concludes, sensibly: "For formal contexts, the traditional usage is generally best." And he notes that even in informal writing, the alternative can appear awkward.
In the story, the teacher pointed out that no one would say, "He is taller than me am." That's a handy device to remember the officially sanctioned way to structure such a sentence.
But if you think that sounds too stuffy, just include the missing word: "He is taller than I am."
Thursday, March 18, 2010
How to be Passionate
He had a passion for life.
A passion for his work.
And a passion for his family.
Can we learn something here?
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Area Tabletopics Contest Champion TM Chandran
Interview by Diana Legro with World Champion Speaker Darren LaCroix
http://www.speakingsuccessinternational.com/DarrenLaCroix.mp3
The Language Perfectionist: "Say What?!" Funny Misunderstandings
A mondegreen is a phrase that has been misheard and thus misunderstood, usually with humorous results.
Here's an example: A TV commercial claiming that a car was carved from "a single block of steel" was heard by a viewer as "a single glockenspiel."
Another example: A 2008 news story about newly released Nixon-era tape recordings reported that a transcriber rendered "Mao Zedong" as "Nelson's tongue."
Children are natural mondegreeners. Over the years, untold numbers have dutifully intoned "Jose can you see," "I led the pigeons to the flag," and "To the republic, for Richard Stans."
One mondegreen subgenre is especially popular: the misheard rock music lyric. Among the most frequently cited examples:
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"There's a bathroom on the right" for "There's a bad moon on the rise." (Creedence Clearwater Revival)
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"The girl with colitis goes by" for "The girl with kaleidoscope eyes." (The Beatles)
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"'Scuse me while I kiss this guy" for "'Scuse me while I kiss the sky." (Jimi Hendrix)
Many of these song lyric mondegreens have been collected by a writer named Gavin Edwards and turned into a series of funny books. And numerous websites are devoted to garbled lyrics. One of the more popular -- kissthisguy.com -- immortalizes the Hendrix blooper.
The word mondegreen is itself a mondegreen, created by American writer Sylvia Wright. Here's the story.
In a 1954 article in Harper's magazine, Wright said that, as a child, she misunderstood two lines of a 17th-century Scottish ballad. The lines were: "They ha'e slain the Earl of Moray, / And laid him on the green." But she heard them as: "They ha'e slain the Earl of Moray, / And Lady Mondegreen." Noting that "no one else has thought up a word for [such bloopers]," she coined the term mondegreen.
Caution: No official authority exists to authenticate mondegreens. Some are probably invented by pranksters and passed off to the unsuspecting as the genuine article. Laugh at your own risk!
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Port Dickson Toastmasters Club Next Meeting 9/3/2010
Competitions! Celebrations!Fellowships! All in one day!
The winners of our club level competitions:
Speech contest : Capt Khalid
Table topic contest : Robert Tan
They will be representing us to the area level on 4th Mac.
Roles On 9th Mac 2010:
TOE : GT Singam,ACB
TTM : Donna Kat,ACB
TTE : Chua Eu Chieh, CC
Humour : Donna Kat,ACB
GE : Valentine,TM
LE : Chandran,TM
AC : OPEN
TK : OPEN
Speaker 1: Harold, TM
Speaker 2: Lee Kah Tor,ACS
Speaker 3: Sukumaran, CC
Evaluator 1: Role Open
Evaluator 2: Role Open
Evaluator 3: Role Open
Kay Ku
Secretary
Port Dickson Toast Masters Club