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40 years ago I had a psychology 101 class. The instructor said the symptom of making up your own words only the patient knows the definition of is neologisms. âExamples would be de-athenated, wallmationer, and sexiatry, except I think I know what that one is.â
I canât help but think of the comic Norm Crosby with this comic strip today. He used to mess with the English language with comedy. Very funny the way his delivery was!
When he was little, my oldest grandson loved it when I used words heâd never heard before and would try to use them â often out of context. Expanding his vocabulary was great ⌠except for his parroting of some words he shouldnât have overheard!
This strip reminds me so much of him when he was that age. Heâs turned out to be an exceptional young man. Heâs 30 today, so ÂĄFeliz CumpleaĂąos, Allen! from âGrampsâ.
How very âcontubriusâ of him. My friends and I used that word all through high school, and it doesnât mean a darned thing: âHow very contubrius of you!â It could be either positive or negative, depending on context. Silly,that I still use it.
There was an episode on âThe Simpsonsâ where the teachers were using words that werenât words. I remember âpromulentâ and âembiggensâ. As in the town motto: âA noble spirit embiggens the smallest man.â One teacher said she had never heard that word before moving to Springfield. The other said, âReally? Itâs such a promulent word.â
C 7 months ago
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
ʲá 7 months ago
even Roscoe knows thatâs not a real word
carlsonbob 7 months ago
Lots of words coming from Earlâs cranianul.
californiamonty 7 months ago
Earlâs correct. The problem isnât in making up new words, but rather in getting others to use them. (I majored in linguistics, BTW.)
Walter Kocker 7 months ago
âHow . . . cromulent.â ââRight, Lisa?â
Martin I 7 months ago
perfectly jellicle
Argythree 7 months ago
:PPPP
MichaelAxelFleming 7 months ago
Well, now heâs just being sedacious.
WaywardWind 7 months ago
SighâŚneither of my grampas were funny.
oldthang 7 months ago
I donât remember the last time I said primulent.
kendavis09 7 months ago
Is that an adjitative?
iggyman 7 months ago
There IS the comic censor!
Tra1nman2 Premium Member 7 months ago
Why not? The pharmaceutical companies do it every time they introduce a new drug.
bobwigg761 7 months ago
Sounds like a Sniglet to me.
win.45mag 7 months ago
It makes him feel imbiggened.
Funniguy 7 months ago
Okay, how many of us looked up Primulent?
MacII 7 months ago
Iâm sure Earl is anaspeptic, frasmotic, even compunctious to have caused Nelson such pericombobulation
phritzg Premium Member 7 months ago
Itâs absitively, posolutely okay. (Iâve actually heard those words used, in an old radio commercial, and they were sung by a bass singer.)
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member 7 months ago
Thatâs how words work, after all.
zeexenon 7 months ago
Most of our C.E.O.s and politicians are of an age when, very early, they became enamored with antidisestablishmentarianism and schadenfreude.
Milady Meg 7 months ago
Thereâs no need for that word. Cromulent is a perfectly adequate word, and it fits perfectly.
E.Z. Smith Premium Member 7 months ago
40 years ago I had a psychology 101 class. The instructor said the symptom of making up your own words only the patient knows the definition of is neologisms. âExamples would be de-athenated, wallmationer, and sexiatry, except I think I know what that one is.â
iggyman 7 months ago
There aâint no such word!
mrsdonaldson 7 months ago
Totally fetch.
Slowly, he turned... 7 months ago
Earl is a regular Shakespeare!
wongo 7 months ago
Well thatâs just unlauded!
RussHeim 7 months ago
Primulent is a perfectly cromulent word.
Angry Indeed Premium Member 7 months ago
That Earl. Heâs a muse. A muse for Dr. Seuss! Oh, the words I can make!
Intergalactic Hussy 7 months ago
You mean cromulent. Better embiggen your vocabulary.
JudithStocker Premium Member 7 months ago
I canât help but think of the comic Norm Crosby with this comic strip today. He used to mess with the English language with comedy. Very funny the way his delivery was!
Daltongang Premium Member 7 months ago
Nelson itâs the Covfefe thing to do these days.
ANIMAL 7 months ago
okâŚâŚ. ya LOST me on THAT one
assrdood 7 months ago
I hate it when people use big words just to make themselves sound perspicacious.
Dr_Fogg 7 months ago
Shakespeare made up words all the time
ladykat Premium Member 7 months ago
Go for it, Nelson.
khjalmarj 7 months ago
I think the last time I used âprimulentâ was in the middle of a sneeze.
Ishka Bibel 7 months ago
Shades of âcromulentâ
w16521 7 months ago
Roscoe is like: âWTFâ?
elgrecousa Premium Member 7 months ago
it looks like Earlâs left side of the brain is working overtime.
Linguist 7 months ago
When he was little, my oldest grandson loved it when I used words heâd never heard before and would try to use them â often out of context. Expanding his vocabulary was great ⌠except for his parroting of some words he shouldnât have overheard!
This strip reminds me so much of him when he was that age. Heâs turned out to be an exceptional young man. Heâs 30 today, so ÂĄFeliz CumpleaĂąos, Allen! from âGrampsâ.
cactusbob333 7 months ago
Certainly a lot of fartilization going on here.
James -Baird 7 months ago
The Presidential cantidate for on party has done it for the last nine years.
ThomasTracewell1 7 months ago
Primulent is a menopause pill.
Strawberry King 7 months ago
Against the law? Oh, pish posh!
Thehag 7 months ago
Had to look p up, just in case. Not a word but two companies with that name one in VA and one in the UK
FunnyPageLover 7 months ago
Just in time for middle school to start with their weird, made up words - scibidi, gyat, rizz âŚ.
PraiseofFolly 7 months ago
How very âcontubriusâ of him. My friends and I used that word all through high school, and it doesnât mean a darned thing: âHow very contubrius of you!â It could be either positive or negative, depending on context. Silly,that I still use it.
rob.home 7 months ago
Cromulent, please!I made up the word âanfagastatillionâ to mean a very large number when I was a kid.
ValancyCarmody Premium Member 7 months ago
Frindle
humorist54 Premium Member 7 months ago
There was an episode on âThe Simpsonsâ where the teachers were using words that werenât words. I remember âpromulentâ and âembiggensâ. As in the town motto: âA noble spirit embiggens the smallest man.â One teacher said she had never heard that word before moving to Springfield. The other said, âReally? Itâs such a promulent word.â
Otis Rufus Driftwood 7 months ago
Now that is cromulent.
Jack Bell Premium Member 7 months ago
I donât mind people making up new words. But I hate it when they want to change the meaning of words we already have.
Purple People Eater 7 months ago
Of course you can make up your own words. How else are you going to embiggen your vocabulary?
[Unnamed Reader - 96ae98] 6 months ago
Iâm pretty sure he meant to say cromulent.