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Richard Walker

Nursery Rhyme

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Mr. Small was nothing at all

And Mrs.Tiny less

And Missy Minature a dot.

God bless them all, God bless.


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Richard Walker

Tom Swifty Takes A Swim

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"Anyone else up for skinny-dipping?", asked Tom expansively.

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Richard Walker

'Beastly Park'

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Edited by Richard Walker, Friday, 23 Nov 2018, 22:24

Can you decode this zoolologists dozen of 'elemental' mammals?

27-74

6-85

4-18

42-92-34

74-13-57-5-39

3-8-7

16-1-75-74

42-8-34

74-13-57-5-39

5-85

1-53-15-84

6-18-53-5-8-92

34-13


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Richard Walker

Be Proud That You Have Lived

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Be proud that you have lived

Humans have been cruel but that beside

They have been creative, and been kind.

And honourable, in spite of all.

Therefore, be proud to have lived.

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Richard Walker

A Small World

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Richard Walker

Expertise

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Richard Walker

Watchdog

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I read today that a report is calling for a fake news watchdog. About time I say, the public is fed up with real ones.

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Richard Walker

Tom Swifty's Secret Phobia

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Edited by Richard Walker, Monday, 19 Nov 2018, 22:07

Inwardly Tom detested hospitals.

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Richard Walker

Tom Swifty Pays Attention

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Tom watched the circus acts intently.

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Richard Walker

Irony

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Edited by Richard Walker, Monday, 19 Nov 2018, 00:06

Most people think 'irony means irony' and so it does.

But a lesser-known word, 'irony' means 'like iron'. Just as 'steely' means 'like steel'.

Other metally examples are silvery, coppery, leady, tinny, bronzy, brassy.

But suppose this was extended to other metal species. Then we'd have some tongue twisters such as

  • Aluminiumy
  • Molybdenumy
  • Neodymiumy

Plus the surprising and beautiful

  • Mercuryy
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Richard Walker

Heard Down The Local

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“I'm ambidextrous with both hands”.

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Richard Walker

Mistaken Identity

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Richard Walker

A Disputation

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A. You can argue for and against anything.

B. You may say that, but I disagree. 

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Richard Walker

What Would You Call This Couple?

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Richard Walker

What Would You Call This Woman?

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Richard Walker

Collective Noun

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Question. What do you call a collection of hens?

Answer. A peck of hens.

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Richard Walker

Design check

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Unfortunately the designer misunderstood what pawnbroking is about.


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Richard Walker

Macbeth has murdered sleep

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Richard Walker

A Memory

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When Winter came we thought of course of snow.

In that far dreamland long ago.


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Richard Walker

Dinosaur Eggs

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I was amazed and delighted today to read that dinosaur eggs were coloured, see

https://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/dinosaur-egg-colour-1.4888009

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Richard Walker

Dawn Boat

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To what shall I compare
this transient world we live in?

White retreating waves behind a boat
that vanishes, rowing into the light of dawn.

Sami Mansei, 8th century, translated by Meredith McKinney

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Richard Walker

What Would You Call This Woman?

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Richard Walker

Autumn Cat Haiku

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Edited by Richard Walker, Monday, 5 Nov 2018, 23:05

Wants in, then wants out.

Playing with leaves, next sleeping by the fire.

Autumn cat.

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Richard Walker

Let's Get Phersunal

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Edited by Richard Walker, Monday, 5 Nov 2018, 23:53

The Etruscans are mysterious. They flourished in what is now northern Italy for half a thousand years, always in close contact with the Romans. The name Rome was itself probably from Etruscan. But from the 4th century BCE Roman influence was overwhelming. Many Romans traced Etruscan descent, but the language was gradually lost as Latin took over and Etruria was assimilated.

In the 1st century CE the Emperor Claudius (as in, the brilliant Robert Graves novels and even more brilliant TV series I Claudius) is supposed to have compiled an Etruscan-Latin dictionary, and to have gone out into the Tuscan countryside and interviewed the last few native speakers of the language. Modern opinion generally agrees that this dictionary really existed, but it hasn’t survived. So the language is essentially lost.

But all modern English speakers know at least one Etruscan word. Person. It's from Etruscan phersu, mask. This was probably a mask someone wore in a religious or dramatic performance. In other words, the just like the modern word persona - an assumed character, or a facade. The word was borrowed into Latin as person.

The words person, person, personal, personality and so on, all derive from the same phersu, via Latin and later intermediate languages. And that’s remarkable, because a remnant word from the languages prevalent in Southern Europe before the more recent modern Indo-European language group arrived still survives and has the same basic meaning. A word caught in linguistic amber.


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Richard Walker

Autumn Crow

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Edited by Richard Walker, Sunday, 4 Nov 2018, 21:07

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