Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Clutched – RETRO Wordplay Wednesday™ 09/05/18


WW's big bro site logo: Blast from Your Past!
Wordplay Wednesday Goes Retro! 

I thoroughly enjoy bringing an obscure, long un-used, or confounding word to your already overloaded brains every week, but it’s time to tweak the weekly grind with a fun romp down Memory Lane.

For the whole month of September, we’ll explore words and phrases from yesteryear to play with the memories of Boomers and those holding on to 39 as long as possible. For the young’uns, it’ll probably be a humorous venture, at best.*

Every decade has its kitschy slang and funny fascination with skewed definitions, so each week we’ll explore a different decade: 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, respectively, thanks to my cousin/best friend, Ron. It was his idea and while I’d love to hog the credit, he’d say, “I knew you’d do that.” So I’m proving him wrong. 😊

Feel free to tuck these vocabulary tidbits into a corner of your mind until the next time you make it a point to visit someone who will enjoy your newfound knowledge or rekindled memory. Make it a meaningful and fun way to connect!

Tickling your tranny from the Fabulous Fifties … since Ron is a classic car buff, we’re revving up this week’s retro word knowledge with …

CLUTCHED (kluch -ed) vi. – Rejected. [WW/RETRO-1 #180]
            Dictionary definition, in short: 1) to snatch or seize (at); 2) to engage the clutch of an automobile, etc.

Yup. When guys chatted in their bravado manner, common waaaaay back in the 1950s (think Grease, West Side Story, and The Godfather), they often used vehicle metaphors.

Now, we could hypothesize that they knew they were creating slang for a “real” word like discarded, disdained, or spurned; but if girls were around, using a car term also served to keep them from eavesdropping. Cars …engines … tires and clutches … grease … ewwww! We weren’t listening.

So poor jilted John boasted to Frank, “Yeah, man, at least I got to second base before I spent too much dough on her, and she clutched.” Granted, still not perfect grammar, but then car talk often isn’t. (Don’t get huffy guys—girl talk nearly always isn’t! Like, for sure!)

What’s interesting though, is the number of words that suffered twisted definitions or slid into slang, in the 1950s through the 1970s especially, that are still in use today. This is just one list that you can peruse and pick up a whole new language for your next retro “bash.”

Do you have a “blast” when you’re having fun? Is your new car really “cool”? Whatever your age, I’m sure you’re “tight” with someone who will appreciate your hip “jets” (smarts, brains).

From Mel’s Drive-In to the 1956 Ford Thunderbird, hope you have a mah-velous stroll down Memory Lane!

Word Challenge: CLUTCHED.  It’s easy to ridicule a generation for their outdated slang and “old” ways; but remember two important dynamics: intertwined with faded jargon is age-transcending wisdom, and; *2) treat every age with tolerance, as you will be there someday too. Food for thought, as you fit clutched into your week of vintage writings.

Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t fattening! Expanding your mind is a no-cost, simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments below.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

                       


LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series, available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon, … The Psychedelic Seventies!

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Pendragon – Wordplay Wednesday™ 08/29/18


Flash in the Pan 

Let your imagination fire up with this week’s Wordplay word! Do you know anyone who is all flash and no flame? Your new secret word for them …

PENDRAGON (pen dragʹɘn) n. – supreme chief or leader; a title used in ancient Britain. [WW #179]

Interestingly, pendragon is not relegated to the archaic or obsolete bin in the dictionary. So, what we have here, is an amusing way to refer to oh-so-many faux leaders who, like dragons, love to flash their flames with little to show for it.

Its very reference to dragons makes one wonder why more isn’t offered in its definition, to denote a certain type of leader—at the very least, one to be respected for fierce, forbidding, or even cruel leadership.

On the other dragon wing, one might also envision a commanding yet benevolent ruler, if we’re to believe in legends and fairy tales. Could its origin have derived from “pensive dragon”? A fun and fanciful mashup.

Pendragon is a great word for fact or fiction, but of course, use it wisely, sparingly, and with tolerance, for with dragon in its origin, it still holds a certain enigmatic majesty.

Word Challenge: PENDRAGON.* Although you may want to apply this word with disrespect and derision, it would be sad to besmirch the reputation of the almighty ancient dragons. Perhaps playfully, or with grudging admiration is called for, as you fit pendragon into your week of powerful writings.

Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t fattening! Expanding your mind is a no-cost, simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments below.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

                       
* BTW, Pendragon can be a surname or reference any number of books and TV series titles, so do be solicitous of your usage. However, with Halloween on the moon’s horizon, you may be interested in a costume

LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series, available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon, … The Psychedelic Seventies!

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Bombinate – Wordplay Wednesday™ 08/22/18


A Word to Explode Your Writing 

Nope. We’re not gonna blow anything up.

Riddle: There is no bomb … no B-52 bomber … no bug bomb …not even a photo bomb. Yet, the Internet still bursts with it. Think hornets’ nest …

BOMBINATE (bämʹbɘ nāt’) vi. to make a buzzing sound. (n. bombination). [WW #178]

I often turn the sound off when reviewing news and social media on the Internet. And, even silently, five to ten minutes of visual noise at a time, is about all I can take. Why?

Incessant, insistent and obnoxious activity bombinates our senses all day, every day, like a stirred-up beehive, even without sound. It reverberates with inane and often, just plain ignorant, silent noise

With each new controversial topic posted every millisecond (and way too many podcasts and videos), the Internet bombinates without relief, 24/7. It’s up to us to limit our time on it, for the sake of our sanity, and our writing.

And are we ever away from it? How often do you sit in silence? If the answer is never, give it a thought. If you “can’t hear yourself think” for the noise of it—always reaching for your phone? … checking your fave social media?—it’s time for a break from the grid.
Bombination assailing your ears and eyes unceasingly, rivals the dreaded tinnitus that bombards our auditory senses, for the unlucky who suffer from it. Just like tinnitus, there is no cure, and very little respite. Sigh.

Word Challenge: BOMBINATE. Take an off-the-grid challenge, as you fit bombinate into your week of buzzy writings.

Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t fattening! Expanding your mind is a no-cost simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments below.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

                  
@PenchantForPen

LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series, available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon, … The Psychedelic Seventies!

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz