CRAIG CONLEY (Prof. Oddfellow) is recognized by Encarta as “America’s most creative and diligent scholar of letters, words and punctuation.” He has been called a “language fanatic” by Page Six gossip columnist Cindy Adams, a “cult hero” by Publisher’s Weekly, a “monk for the modern age” by George Parker, and “a true Renaissance man of the modern era, diving headfirst into comprehensive, open-minded study of realms obscured or merely obscure” by Clint Marsh. An eccentric scholar, Conley’s ideas are often decades ahead of their time. He invented the concept of the “virtual pet” in 1980, fifteen years before the debut of the popular “Tamagotchi” in Japan. His virtual pet, actually a rare flower, still thrives and has reached an incomprehensible size. Conley’s website is OneLetterWords.com.
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Found 98 posts tagged ‘list’


I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – August 15, 2017 (permalink)

From The Salina Evening Journal, August 2, 1921.
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#worries #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – July 13, 2017 (permalink)

The lovely song "Autumn's Edge" by Xeno & Oaklander got us wondering what else happens at autumn's edge.  Here's what we discovered in the literature:

At autumn's edge ...

In the photo, note that it's autumn on the right side of the road and summer on the left.  The painted line on the road marks autumn's edge.
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
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This May Surprise You – August 23, 2016 (permalink)

A book is a cactus.

[That's a Googlewhack, with or without the word "like."]
  Book
Cactus
most have spines (sometimes very fine) x x
often given at Christmas x x
classifying is difficult; divided into several categories x x
cultivated x x
often ornamental x x
prized in botanical gardens x x
crossed the Atlantic on European ships trading
between South America and Africa
x x
prone to over-collection x x
may be eaten by bugs x x
found in dry environments x x
occur in a wide range of sizes x x
quickly absorb water x x
roots with Latin and Greek nomenclature x x
long dormancies x x
may cause changes in mood, perception and
cognition through their effects on the brain
x x
essential for dating non-literate cultures   x
> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
#cactus #list
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Colorful Allusions – June 12, 2016 (permalink)

The Top Ten Unpaintable Blues:
The far mountains of Bertraghboy Bay, Ireland.
"In the intense cold of late evening the further shores of Bertraghboy Boy seemed to catch and hold the last of the sunlight, the seawrack below high-water line glowing orange, the walled fields above burnished green, the far mountains an unpaintable blue." (The Crying of the Wind)
The New Mexico desert sky.
"I awoke in the desert of New Mexico to behold golden sand, golden grass, green-gold sage brush, golden wastes, vast, craggy, creviced, cliff-sided buttes rising turret-like, a wide domain bounded by purple mountains and unpaintable blue sky." (Robert Jackson, Montreal Gazette)
Twilight in the California desert.
"Strewn from the western desert's wild wings across the unpaintable blue of the twilight sky stream rose-red pennants, tender yet resplendent—not the washed out hue of other sunset skies but the soul satisfying glory of color the desert sky alone can show." (The Desert and the Rose)
The mountains of Moab.
"The intense blue belt of water beyond, terminating in the clear, soft tones of the indescribable, unpaintable blue mountains of Moab." (Excavations at Jerusalem, 1894-1897)
The shore of ancient Kamiros, Rhodes.
"You look down from the central plinth across a winding main street backed by the taut hard unpaintable blue of the sea, and the smoky chunks of the Turkish mainland." (Spirit of Place: Letters and Essays on Travel)
The Azorean ocean.
"Then there is the intense blue of the Ocean.  I have never seen such deep, completely unpaintable blue before.  It is so different from the opaque grayish waves that hit the coast of Holland." (Pieter Adriaans, "Painting on the Azores")
Someone other than Brittany's irises.
"She can't see any tiger gold or unpaintable blue in Brittany's irises." ("Full Moon on a Sunday Night," Part One)
The sky over Portland, Oregon.
"The air is crisp and the sky is unpaintable blue." (Scott Conary)
The blue sky anywhere.
"Ruskin says that a blue sky is unpaintable — blue fire he calls it, and unpaintable — and yet Australians cannot accept this." (Plein Airs and Graces: The Life and Times of George Collingridge)
The Huxtable kitchen.
"[I]n all its badly-hung, unpaintable, powder-blue glory."  (Andy Peters)
> read more from Colorful Allusions . . .
#blue #list
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Restoring the Lost Sense – July 19, 2015 (permalink)

"There ain't a lighter hand at a pudden, though I say that shouldn't."  From Lettice Lisle by Lady Verney, 1870.

So the lighter the hand, the lighter the pudding.  But also:

[Inexplicable images from generations ago invite us to restore the lost sense of immediacy.  We follow the founder of the Theater of Spontaneity, Jacob Moreno, who proposed stringing together "now and then flashes" to unfetter illusion and let imagination run free.  The images we have collected for this series came at a tremendous price, which we explained previously.]
> read more from Restoring the Lost Sense . . .
#vintage illustration #1870s #pudding #list
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The Right Word – March 1, 2014 (permalink)

Given our substantial research into esoteric tomes, we're sometimes consulted for strange and unusual magical spells. An award-winning quarterly magazine of art and culture based in New York [name withheld for reasons of discretion] once asked us for a spell to cast over their printing press. Most recently, a winner of two Gertrude Stein Awards in Innovative American Poetry [name withheld in a nod to our lost age of privacy] asked us for no fewer than thirteen different spells:
  1. A spell which finds and locates the source of (malicious) gossip and renders the "first tongue" of this gossip chain either serpent-like (i.e. forks the tongue) or like that of some other loathsome beast.
  2. A spell which will allow a refrigerator to enchant the food in it, so that when you eat the food you see the food's history (such as the worker picking the grapes. This would be quite grisly when it came to lunch meat and we realized it had a "family life.")
  3. A spell which will render water capable of transmitting its memories. When an enemy steps into a tub of "blissful" water, suddenly he or she is overcome with a thousand television stations of water memory, all the way back to the time of the dinosaurs.
  4. A spell that turns pussy willows back into the cats they once were.
  5. A spell which allows you to enter into a painting or use a painting, drawing, etc. as an avenue of escape.
  6. A spell to send snow back upwards into the sky—a reverse snowstorm spell.
  7. A spell whereby you can have birds carry a message to other birds to so on to other birds in order to reach someone far away.
  8. A spell which makes someone the reverse of a money magnet, so money is always figuratively (and literally) flying away from him or her.
  9. A spell to make someone fall in love with his or her own reflection. For example, a teenager cannot concentrate in class but must constantly seek a reflective surface to the point of madness. Good for a stuck up kid in school, beauty queen hex, etc.
  10. A spell whereby planes flying overhead will drop valuable things into your yard or on your roof, like a form of tribute from airplane.
  11. A spell to turn pancake batter into quicksand, so when the person eats the finished product, the pancake inside the person slowly causes the person to implode into himself/herself, vanishing throughout the day in a very geometrically weird way.
  12. A spell on cookies to make them like online cookies; they drop without the eater's consent and glow, leading you to the person you are trailing and to whom you have given the bewitched cookie.
  13. A spell to make tornados play music. Needles appears within and the tornado is turned into an old school record player even as it grinds away at a landscape.
Anyone wondering about the content of these spells will want to keep an eye out for our Young Wizard's Hexopedia.
> read more from The Right Word . . .
#vintage illustration #divination #magick #magic spell #occult #wizardry #ancient greece #oracle #illustration #hokus pokus #delphic #list
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Restoring the Lost Sense – January 19, 2014 (permalink)

From In the Sweet and Dry by Christopher Morley and Bart Haley (1919).  It reads:

He pulled out a drawer at random—Schedule K-36, Minor Social Offenses—and ran his embittered eye over a card.  It was marked Conversational Felonies, and began thus:

Arguing
Blandishing
Buffoonery
Contradicting
Demurring
Ejaculating
Exaggerating
Facetiousness
Giggling
Hemming and Hawing
Implying
Insisting
Jesting

Each item also referred to another card on which the penalty was noted and legal test cases summarized.
[Inexplicable images from generations ago invite us to restore the lost sense of immediacy.  We follow the founder of the Theater of Spontaneity, Jacob Moreno, who proposed stringing together "now and then flashes" to unfetter illusion and let imagination run free.  The images we have collected for this series came at a tremendous price, which we explained previously.]
> read more from Restoring the Lost Sense . . .
#vintage illustration #etiquette #conversation #illustration #list
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Precursors – January 10, 2013 (permalink)

Forty-four years before Doctor Dolittle talked to the animals, we learned that animals say such things as:
  • He did it first.
  • I wish.
  • I don't care.
  • Not my fault.
  • What is that to you?
  • I am as good as you.
  • More, more.
  • Why not?
Additionally:

I want to see the world.

That is my place.

That's nought to me.

It is too hard.

Why?

(The Man's Boot and Other Tales; or Fabulous Truths in Words of One Syllable by Gertrude Sellon, 1876.)
> read more from Precursors . . .
#list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – October 14, 2012 (permalink)


Autumnal blues by Gideon Wright.
Here are twenty tips for overcoming autumnal blues, from a letter by Sydney Smith to Lady Georgiana Morpeth, Feb. 16, 1820:

Dear Lady Georgiana,– Nobody has suffered more from low spirits than I have done — so I feel for you.

1st. Live as well as you dare.

2nd. Go into the shower-bath with a small quantity of water at a temperature low enough to give you a slight sensation of cold, 75° or 80°.

3rd. Amusing books.

4th. Short views of human life — not further than dinner or tea.

5th. Be as busy as you can.

6th. See as much as you can of those friends who respect and like you.

7th. And of those acquaintances who amuse you.

8th. Make no secret of low spirits to your friends, but talk of them freely — they are always worse for dignified concealment.

9th. Attend to the effects tea and coffee produce upon you.

10th. Compare your lot with that of other people.

11th. Don’t expect too much from human life — a sorry business at the best.

12th. Avoid poetry, dramatic representations (except comedy), music, serious novels, melancholy, sentimental people, and everything likely to excite feeling or emotion, not ending in active benevolence.

13th. Do good, and endeavour to please everybody of every degree.

14th. Be as much as you can in the open air without fatigue.

15th. Make the room where you commonly sit, gay and pleasant.

16th. Struggle by little and little against idleness.

17th. Don’t be too severe upon yourself, or underrate yourself, but do yourself justice.

18th. Keep good blazing fires.

19th. Be firm and constant in the exercise of rational religion.

20th. Believe me, dear Lady Georgiana,

Very truly yours,
Sydney Smith

(via Futility Closet)
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – August 13, 2012 (permalink)

We have a homemade lie detector.  We state the following propositions, the participant thinks yes or no, and the machine's red or green bulbs light up the answer:
  1. Your wish is that I wish what you secretly wish.
  2. Within a two-hour period, you have eaten an amount of food that most people would consider excessive.
  3. You've ruled out the possibility that you're being overly suspicious.
  4. You know who she is and she knows what she is.
  5. That time you said you loved the chocolate cake, you threw up a little in your mouth.
  6. The fact that you tend to stay up through the hours of darkness has nothing to do with a craving for blood.
  7. When you lie you break out in a rash.
  8. You pray to be forgiven for doing that thing with the thing.
  9. There's just no explaining that whatchamacallit.
  10. You secretly dream of waking up as a Canadian.
  11. Maybe it's time to stop not doing what you pretended you can do and can't, and start doing the thing that you can't do but can no longer pretend that you can.
  12. Your secret desire is my deepest fear.
  13. You can't listen to very much Wagner because you start getting the urge to conquer Poland.
  14. You're so busy with work that you don't have time to "give back to society.”
  15. You have neither the money nor the know-how to get that thingamajig out of your head.
  16. You've ruled out deranged psychopathy and decided it sounds like fun.
  17. Nobody knows what you carry about with you in your pocket.
  18. No one will ever suspect that you have the whatsit in your possession.
  19. Your secret desire is to bust out that straw-cowboy-hat-and-flip-flops look without looking out of place.
  20. You have drunk champagne out of the slipper of a dancing girl.
  21. You want to live better than you do now and work fewer hours.
  22. You did not mean what you said that day we parted.
  23. You have a playroom all to yourself.
  24. You want to found a new religion.
  25. Though talkative and often high-strung, your secret desire is to be with someone to whom you don't have to say a word, someone whose eyes are hypnotic and whose arms are soothing and strong.
  26. You secretly dream of being in front of the camera.
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#lie detector #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – October 19, 2011 (permalink)

There's only one rule:

• there are no rules (if you're stretching your imagination) —David Goss, The Science of Living Better Forever

• step on a crack , break your mother's back (if you're playing a sidewalk game)

• have the teapot in front of you at all times (if you're crocheting tea cosies) —Loani Prior, Really Wild Tea Cosies

• no deep-fried foods (if you're throwing a party and watching your cholesterol) —Mary Mihaly, The Complete Guide to Lowering Your Cholesterol

• there's no being tired (if you're touring Paris) —Penelope Rowlands, Paris Was Ours

• say "Thank you" (if you're receiving a compliment) —Thriving in the Workplace All-in-One For Dummies

• the teddy bear stays in the house (if you're a dog in training) —Heavenly Humor for the Dog Lover's Soul

• never, ever let a boy touch you there unless he's your husbandGillian Flynn, Dark Places

• wear whatever is most comfortable (if you're hiking with a dog) —Dan Nelson, Best Hikes with Dogs Western Washington

• never miss paying your round (if you're drinking with friends) —Jack Kahane, Memoirs of a Booklegger

• there must be at least one [item] on the list that is impossible (if you're setting goals) —David Taylor, The Naked Millionaire

• anything goes, as long as you keep at least two tires on the pavement (if you're driving an automobile) —Glenn Beck, The Overton Window

• conquer at any price (if you're on the battlefield) —Luis M. Rocha, The Holy Bullet

• yes means yes and no means no (in the sexual marketplace) —Glenn T. Stanton, Secure Daughters, Confident Sons

• never get involved with a student (if you're a good teacher) —Hank Brooks, The Inlet

• if you represent the wife, get as much as possible; if you represent the husband, give away as little as possible (in divorce settlement) —Howard K. Irving, Children Come First

• form, structure and content should not be separate (in synaesthetic cinema)Simon Rycroft, Swinging City

• don't eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil (if you're in the Garden of Eden)

• you need one equation for every unknown (in algebra) —Norman S. Pratt, Pearls for the Moment

• don't hit the ducks (in a joke about a golf course in heaven) —Stephen Motway, Jokes, Quotes, and Other Assorted Things

• the fewer attachments and aversions you have to the goal, the quicker it will manifest (if you're a non-dualistic self-inquirer) —Aleksander Kupisz, Holistic Creation and Focus Zone Chi Gong

• no touching of the net (if you're a volley ball player) —Joseph A Bulko, Wall of Illusion, Book 3

• you clean up after yourself down there (if you're in the kitchen) —Jennifer Taylor Wojcik, From Day One

• learn to listen (if you're training to be a good communicator) —John Mason, Believe You Can
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – July 1, 2011 (permalink)

July is the month:
  • to promote yourself
  • of freedom
  • of song
  • of roses
  • of great variety
  • of the tempest's power
  • for threshing
  • of vacations
  • of the least bird movement
  • of transition
  • of the insectivora
  • for proverbial meteorology
  • of patriotism and revolutions
  • when the wooden spoon begins to get busy
  • of the ruby
  • when things really heat up in Copenhagen
  • when fuchsias come into their own

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#july #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – June 1, 2011 (permalink)

Sometimes the smartest thing . . .
  • cannot be defended intellectually
  • is to let it roll off your back
  • is to wait until next year
  • is take on a humble task that needs doing
  • is to give up and try from a completely different point of view
  • is to shut your mouth and listen
  • is to get out early
  • is to apologize
  • is to play along
  • is to give up
  • is to stop it altogether
  • is delegating
  • to bring to a gunfight is a knife
  • is to go with the flow
  • is to stay out of the way
  • is to cut your losses
  • is to be scared
  • is to follow your heart
  • to turn a complete about-face and offer something in total opposition to a trend
  • is pack up, jump on your horse and gallop off to greener pastures

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#smartest thing #list
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The Right Word – May 23, 2011 (permalink)

The great Australian comedy series Kath & Kim features some hilariously dumbfounding baby names, such as:
  • Typhphaanniii (pronounced Tiffany)
  • Eppinn'knee Rae¨</i> (Rae is followed by an [umlaut] and a [close italics])
  • Detestannii
  • Paloma
  • Papiloma
  • Tailuh (pronounced Tai Luh)
  • Glen Waverley (after a suburb in Victoria, Australia)
  • Aussie
  • Fat Free Frûche
  • Tiramisu

Then there are these baby names, inspired by a hospital visit (and please note that they all sound better with an Australian accent):
  • Neil Bymouth
  • Cardio Infarction (the downside being the inevitable nickname "Farct")
  • Enema (for a girl)
  • Lupus (for a boy)
  • Catheter
  • I.V. (for a girl)

> read more from The Right Word . . .
#list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – May 1, 2011 (permalink)

I realized what a millstone Google has become, what an albatross, when I thought back over the enigmas, events, non-events, improbabilities and tidbits of surreal hopefulness I have most recently Googled.

This list would include:

1. "recreational activities of unicorns"
2. "People who have been killed by rainbows"
3. "If you drop a multivitamin on the floor and can't find it, can a superpowerful insect develop?"
4. "the lifespan of a clipped toenail" (again lost on the floor, presumably to be used as a weapon by the vitamined-up bug)
5. "animals and insects that resemble Lady Gaga"
6. "has anyone been charged with date raping himself or herself"
7. "did Buddha have a masseur or masseuse?"
8. "erotic attraction to snowmen or snowwomen"
9. "who invented the snowbunny"
10. "how common was cursing among caveman"
11. "numbers between 0 and 9 which have been forgotten"
12. "the longest recorded 'sorry, wrong number' conversation in history"
13. "stalked and killed for dialing a wrong number"
14. "the i.q. of dust bunnies"
15. "people who disappeared attempting time travel"
16. "people who wrote love letters to popes"
17. "the funniest cartoon by a caveman discovered"
18. "who made the first ass xerox?"
19. "annotated history of the snowbunny"
20. "fear of alphabetical order"
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – April 8, 2011 (permalink)


"It all comes down to this," a photo by Troy Holden.
It all comes down to:
  • what works best for you
  • your incredible insecurity
  • the individuals involved
  • coaching
  • a failure to execute
  • money management
  • a simple choice
  • being a coward
  • how much weight a name will carry
  • behavior
  • emotional chemistry
  • how you spin it
  • hitting a key on the computer
  • forming a word
  • freedom and choice
  • rhythms
  • what you know and what you don't
  • using your brain
  • trusting your gut
  • this election
  • desire
  • dedication
  • finding your market
  • higher aspirations
  • memory
  • negotiation
  • safety
  • character
  • what you're throwing out
  • blood
  • human beings
  • one girl
  • attitude
  • priorities
  • accepting responsibility
  • which way you pass the butter
  • greed
  • trust
  • control
  • whether you want your life to be full of accomplishments and triumphs, laughter and good times, or anger and frustration, bitterness and disappointments
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
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#list
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Puzzles and Games :: Which is Funnier – March 25, 2011 (permalink)

Let's enjoy an interlude from our long-running game to consider some things that sound funnier than they are:

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#humor #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – February 18, 2011 (permalink)

The problem with people is:
  • inherent shortsightedness
  • fickleness
  • inability to communicate
  • they're not all the same
  • self-centeredness
  • a lack of foresight
  • overspending
  • an unwillingness to pay their dues
  • focusing on the destination instead of the journey
  • taking themselves too seriously
  • apathy
  • inefficiency
  • inattentiveness
  • prioritization
  • fear and confusion
  • they make poor gods
  • bargain hunting
  • giving up too easily
  • taking shortcuts
  • an infinite supply of wants
  • making small talk
  • being only human

(we culled this list from popular books)
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#people #list
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Puzzles and Games – February 15, 2011 (permalink)

Here's a game of "What am I?"

Your clues:
  • I am an arrogant slap in the face from across the room.
  • I am an ethereal corset trapping everyone in the same unnatural shape.
  • I am a lazy and inelegant concession to fashionable ego.
  • I am too often a substitute for true allure and style.
  • I am an opaque shell concealing everything—revealing nothing.
  • I am a childish masque hiding the timid and unimaginative.
What am I?

Answer: Perfume (The answer is in black text on the black background. Highlight it to view.)

These clues are courtesy of Christopher Brosius.
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#riddle #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – May 15, 2010 (permalink)

Our friend Jason disagrees with President Obama's chilling decree that information "becomes a distraction."  Indeed, Jason suggests that information ranks only fourth in terms of distraction:

1. Cleavage
2. House flies
3. Shiny objects
4. Information

> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#list
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