T Clark         
         
Noble Dust         
         
T Clark         
         I like “recalcitrant”. I like recalcitrant people, and I count myself among their number. — Noble Dust
T Clark         
         Tenebrous. — Baden
BC         
         
T Clark         
         Brassicas are also referenced as 'coles'; cole slaw is a cabbage salad. Old King Cole was a cabbage head.
Old King Cabbage was a sharp witted savage
and a sharp witted savage was he.
He called for his pipe, he called for his stash
and he called for his brass players three.
He asked to be chopped, and then be slopped
with mayonnaise, sugar, and cream.
Cole, apples and bananas, odd it may seem,
for a fine supper salad can't be topped. — Bitter Crank
T Clark         
         I forgot to say "No doggerel," another good word. Although it means verse or words that are badly written or expressed, it aught to mean the fenced area where dogs are kept before the big drive to Abilene. — T Clark
BC         
         
SophistiCat         
         My word for today is "woebegone." - looking sad, pitiful. — T Clark
Tenebrous.
Came up regularly in a book I once edited and I had to look it up. It still sounds to me to be the opposite of what it is. But maybe that's just me. — Baden
Baden         
         To speakers of Slavic languages it should sound just right: the first syllable stands of "shadow" or "darkness." — SophistiCat
T Clark         
         You were probably thinking of "ought" as in "you can't derive an 'is' from an 'ought', or 'aught' either. — Bitter Crank
My doggerel is bigger than your doggerel. — Bitter Crank
BC         
         craptacular — T Clark
T Clark         
         excrement. — Bitter Crank
unenlightened         
         Origin
Mid 17th century: from Latin tremendus (gerundive of tremere ‘tremble’) + -ous. — oxford dictionaries.com
unenlightened         
         
S         
         Tenebrous. — Baden
I forgot to say "No doggerel," another good word. — T Clark
Effervescent is one of my favourites. — Benkei
T Clark         
         The word 'tremendously' is tremendously important and valuable and I am tremendously fond of it. Unfortunately, due to quantitive easing, it now means 'very slightly'. — unenlightened
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