Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Jink & a Wink! – Wordplay Wednesday™ 12/16/2020

LR Note: Hello Readers, Writers & the Curious! Thank you for coming to this humble blog. As many of us have experienced, a multitude of life’s comfort zones have come crashing to an end in this enigmatic year. After much consideration, I have made a difficult decision which will put Wordplay Wednesday in that category.
       As writers, we take great pleasure sharing what we learn with others, such is what this fun, but time-consuming weekly article has allowed me to do. But it’s time for
Penchant for Penning to step back and take a more parental, supportive role in my more widely read blogs and writings.
      The weekly edition of
Wordplay Wednesday will end with #301 on December 30th. In the New Year, PFP will become a site devoted to the publications and promotion of 39 and Holding Club, and Blast from Your Past monthly sites and writings. However, please join me in a nod to continue Wordplay with short articles appearing on the first Wednesday of each month. C’mon by the first week of each month to enjoy new posts on all of my fun sites.
      Why now, when new words are entering our dictionaries at a furious pace? You may know that I have been writing a book series of pioneering
Rock & Roll Radio DJs (BFYP). The final decade (Book 3-1970s) has been languishing without my firm hand on its forward motion. Time is my enemy. Thus, the anguishing need to scale back on enjoyable, but time-usurping projects.
      I hope you are well and happily looking forward, while infusing insight from what has gone before. Cheers to your health and warm wishes for a much less demanding and healthier New Year for all of us! Next
Wordplay Wednesday on February 3, 2021..LinDee Rochelle

And now, with a merry wink and a Holiday twinkle … this week’s Wordplay Wednesday awaits …

 Sipping Cider with Santa … 

Mmmmmm, that sounds good! Or, you could be sipping cider AS Santa, if you’re the one doing the delivering this year (virtually, of course). Either way, it’s definitely cider time!

For many of us, closing out this year lacks the tone of nostalgia, prevalent in years past …we just want it done and over with. Not that we won’t have issues to confront come 2021, but perhaps not a year that delivers more than one strength-sapping negative …

JINK (ʹjiÅ‹k; 1785) vi. – to move quickly or unexpectedly with sudden turns and shifts (as in dodging).
Or (1786) n. – 1) a quick evasive turn, slip; 2) pl., franks, frolics, esp. high jinks. [WW #299]

With all of its many possible roles, I choose to believe that this word just begs to be applied to Santa, dontcha think? What if our beloved Christmas poem, “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” first published in 1823 had read …

A jovial look and a twist of his head
soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread.

He spoke not a word, but with a smile and a wink,
filled all the stockings, then turned with a jink.

Well he could have, as jink had already entered mainstream vocabulary in 1785! I just tweaked it with a little creative magic …

Real excerpt from common title “‘Twas the Night Before Christmas” (Clement Clarke Moore):

A wink of his eye and a twist of his head
soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread.

He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work,
and filled all the stockings, then turned with a jerk.

Sadly, ‘long about six or seven years old, we begin to question the fantastic magic of Santa Claus. Though we may never lose our faith in the magic of Christmas (Hallmark movies* are a testament to that belief), eventually the idea of jolly ol’ St. Nick arriving by chimney or other tight-squeezed method, to visit children around the world in a single night, becomes a tad far-fetched. Jink or no jink.

But Santa’s mystique has endured to still tweak the fantasy of many a young child, at least for a few blissful years, and spark adult memories from days of yore. What kinds of unexpected twists, turns, and jinks can you add to your fiction and nonfiction works? Have fun with this one … Ho! Ho! Ho!

Word Challenge: JINK. A versatile, intriguing surprise for your creative juices, as you fit jink into your week of clever writings and casual conversations.

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) 

Cheers to learning a new word today, and making the virtual most of your Holidays!

@PenchantForPen
@Irishwriter

[LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books in her Blast from Your Past series (of three) about pioneering R&R Radio DJs. True behind-the-mic tales make GREAT Holiday and anytime Gifts 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!]

LR Notes: 1) Dictionary definitions are quoted from Webster’s New World College Dictionary. Yes, we sometimes present them out of “official” context—but that’s half the fun! Think of it as “creative context.” 2) a] Recent dictionary additions to definitions include a date of first use, if known; b] words in small caps indicate “see also.” 3) Neither I (LinDee Rochelle) nor Penchant for Penning are responsible for how you use information found here, that may result in legal action.
     
*And please note, I do not receive compensation from any company or person for commercial or commodity links I may include in my posts.

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz  

 

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Algid – Wordplay Wednesday™ 12/09/2020

Talk About a Cold Day in Hell 

With that title, we could be writing about this perniciously unsympathetic pandemic. A year ago, if anyone had suggested we would be in this situation, we’d have told them it would be a cold day in hell before that happens. Welcome to the meat locker of purgatory.

So let’s grab a steak, face the devil, and cook up something tasty for a wintry Holiday Season.

Cold temperatures hit incredible lows from Alaska’s frozen tundra—at -60d. recorded in early 2020, to a high of 9-25d. in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, forecast for some time this month. Well, after all, it is winter …

ALGID (ʹal-jɘd; ca. 1623) adj. – cold.  [WW #298]

Short and to the point … seriously, that’s all the dictionary had to say … and with a one-word definition, we feel its chill! So this week’s Wordplay shall be short and to the point …

Use it! An uncommon word for a common occurrence. Great for many casual conversation occasions and alternative literary uses—even rhyming poetry!

No matter what I said or did
His manner turned icily algid

(I didn’t say it had to be good poetry!)

Since cold can be relatively subjective, the uses for algid are boundless. As a description for mood or physical temperature, algid fits in anywhere you have a tight spot for a short, cold word.

I often refer to California for many topics or references of my writings because, well … that’s where I am. But when it comes to weather, it’s obviously on the other end of the spectrum. For December, algid is the word in the upper states from Montana, sweeping down and east to North Carolina. At least according to Weather.com: “The greatest chance for any widespread colder than average temperatures this winter is in December from parts of the Northern Plains and Midwest into the mid-Atlantic and the Southeast.”

So just a heads-up, writers of the storms in life, your fun word for the winter is: algid! (Pun and ♪ music reference* ♪ intended.)

Word Challenge: ALGID. Think outside the freezer box, as you fit algid into your week of frosty writings and clever conversations.

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) 

Cheers to learning a new word today, and making the virtual most of your Holidays!

@PenchantForPen
@Irishwriter

[LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books in her Blast from Your Past series (of three) about pioneering R&R Radio DJs. True behind-the-mic tales make GREAT Holiday and anytime Gifts 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!]

LR Notes: 1) Dictionary definitions are quoted from Webster’s New World College Dictionary. Yes, we sometimes present them out of “official” context—but that’s half the fun! Think of it as “creative context.” 2) a] Recent dictionary additions to definitions include a date of first use, if known; b] words in small caps indicate “see also.” 3) Neither I (LinDee Rochelle) nor Penchant for Penning are responsible for how you use information found here, that may result in legal action.

*The Doors, "Riders on the Storm"

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz