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March 31, 2020

antepenultima

Summary:

  1. aspect English Wikipedia has an article on: Grammatical aspect A property of a verb form indicating the nature of an action as perfective (complete) or imperfective (incomplete or continuing). (79)

  2. augment English Wikipedia has an article on: Augment (linguistics) In some Indo-European languages, a prefixed vowel (usually e-; έ or ή in Greek, a- in Sanskrit) indicating a past tense in a verb. (73)

  3. (See Wiktionary:Obsolete and archaic terms.) areal English Wikipedia has an article on: Areal feature Distributed across multiple languages inhabiting a particular area, due to language contact among them rather than due to inheritance from a common ancestor. (65)

  4. abstract verb In the Slavic languages, a verb of motion whose motion is multidirectional (as opposed to unidirectional) or indirect, or whose action is repeated or in a series (iterative). (59)

  5. (Indo-European ablaut on Wikipedia.) absolutive case A case used to indicate the patient or experiencer of a verb's action. (59)

  6. adverb A word like very, wickedly or often that usually serves to modify an adjective, verb, or other adverb. (57)

  7. active voice The voice verb form in which the grammatical subject is the person or thing doing the action, e.g., The boy kicked the ball. (53)

  8. (ikipedia) apheresis The removal of a letter or sound from the beginning of a word. (51)

  9. (See Voice (grammar) on Wikipedia.) acute accent A diacritic mark ( ´ ) used that can be placed above a number of letters in many languages of the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic writing systems. (50)

  10. agent noun

 
  1. A noun that denotes an agent who does the action denoted by the verb from which the noun is derived, such as "cutter" derived from "to cut". (49)

  2. For example, if English had a fully productive case system that included the ablative case, then in the phrase came from the city, either "the city" or "from the city" would likely be in the ablative. (48)



  3. ablaut In Proto-Indo-European, or any of its descendants (the Indo-European languages), a system of vowel alternation in which the vowels that are used in various parts of the word can change depending on meaning. (47)

Best words:
  1. verb (18)

  2. word (18)

  3. languages (13)

  4. english (11)

  5. noun (11)

  6. case (10)

  7. example (8)

  8. form (8)

  9. wikipedia (8)

  10. sound (8)

  11. verbs (7)

  12. adjective (7)

  13. abstract (6)

  14. “to (6)

  15. action (6)

  16. article (6)

  17. aspect (5)

  18. object (5)

  19. does (5)

  20. other (5)

  21. articles (5)

  22. system (5)

  23. voice (5)

  24. grammatical (5)

  25. (see (5)

  26. concrete (4)

  27. adverbial (4)

  28. clause (4)

  29. words (4)

  30. green (4)

Keyword highlighting:

  • aspect English Wikipedia has an article on: Grammatical aspect A property of a verb form indicating the nature of an action as perfective (complete) or imperfective (incomplete or continuing).

  • augment English Wikipedia has an article on: Augment (linguistics) In some Indo-European languages, a prefixed vowel (usually e-; έ or ή in Greek, a- in Sanskrit) indicating a past tense in a verb.

  • (See Wiktionary:Obsolete and archaic terms.) areal English Wikipedia has an article on: Areal feature Distributed across multiple languages inhabiting a particular area, due to language contact among them rather than due to inheritance from a common ancestor.

  • abstract verb In the Slavic languages, a verb of motion whose motion is multidirectional (as opposed to unidirectional) or indirect, or whose action is repeated or in a series (iterative).

  • (More at Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg Indo-European ablaut on Wikipedia.) absolutive case A case used to indicate the patient or experiencer of a verb's action.

  • adverb A word like very, wickedly or often that usually serves to modify an adjective, verb, or other adverb.

  • active voice The voice verb form in which the grammatical subject is the person or thing doing the action, e.g., The boy kicked the ball.

  • (See Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg aorist on Wikipedia.) apheresis The removal of a letter or sound from the beginning of a word.

  • (See also Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg Voice (grammar) on Wikipedia.) acute accent A diacritic mark ( ´ ) used that can be placed above a number of letters in many languages of the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic writing systems.

  • agent noun A noun that denotes an agent who does the action denoted by the verb from which the noun is derived, such as "cutter" derived from "to cut".

  • For example, if English had a fully productive case system that included the ablative case, then in the phrase came from the city, either "the city" or "from the city" would likely be in the ablative.

  • ablaut In Proto-Indo-European, or any of its descendants (the Indo-European languages), a system of vowel alternation in which the vowels that are used in various parts of the word can change depending on meaning.


Sentences:

    1. a.

    2. "Ante" (Latin for "before").

    3. Hence, a quotation from "a.

    4. 1924" is a quotation from no later than the year 1923.

    5. abbreviation A shortened form of a word, such as an initialism, acronym, or many terms ending in a period.

    6. ablative case A case that indicates separation, or moving away from something.

    7. It is used alone or with certain prepositions.

    8. For example, if English had a fully productive case system that included the ablative case, then in the phrase came from the city, either "the city" or "from the city" would likely be in the ablative.

    9. In some languages, such as Latin, this case has acquired many other uses and does not strictly indicate separation anymore.

  1. ablaut In Proto-Indo-European, or any of its descendants (the Indo-European languages), a system of vowel alternation in which the vowels that are used in various parts of the word can change depending on meaning.

  2. The system is used for purposes of inflection and word derivation.

  3. In the Germanic languages, it forms the basis of the strong verbs.

  4. A specific form of ablaut is referred to as a grade; see for instance zero-grade.

  5. (ablaut on Wikipedia.) absolutive case A case used to indicate the patient or experiencer of a verb's action.

  6. abstract noun A noun that denotes an idea, emotion, feeling, quality or other abstract or intangible concept, as opposed to a concrete item, or a physical object.

  7. Antonym of concrete noun.

  8. abstract verb In the Slavic languages, a verb of motion whose motion is multidirectional (as opposed to unidirectional) or indirect, or whose action is repeated or in a series (iterative).

  9. Also called an indeterminate verb.

  10. The opposite type of verb, which expresses a single, completed action, is termed a concrete verb (or a determinate verb).

  11. Motion verbs in the Slavic languages come in abstract/concrete lexical pairs, e.g. Russian ходи́ть (xodítʹ, “to go (abstract)”) vs.

  12. идти́ (idtí, “to go (concrete)”), бе́гать (bégatʹ, “to run (abstract)”) vs.

  13. бежа́ть (bežátʹ, “to run (concrete)”), носи́ть (nosítʹ, “to carry (abstract)”) vs.

  14. нести́ (nestí, “to carry (concrete)”).

  15. English does not make this distinction.

  16. For example, "I went to the post office" could be abstract (if I went there and came back, i.e. multidirectional) or concrete (if I am there now, i.e. unidirectional), and different Russian verbs would be used to translate "went" in these two circumstances.

  17. In Polish coming back does not cause abstract verbs to be used, only doing something many times (Chodzę do biura.

  18. 'I go to the office (every day).' vs.

  19. Idę do biura 'I am going to the office (now).') or moving without target (Chodzę po pokoju 'I am walking around the room.' vs.

  20. Idę przez pokój.

  21. 'I am walking across the room.') does.

  22. Abstract verbs are always imperfective in aspect, even with prefixes that are normally associated with the perfective aspect (e.g. Polish przybiegać).

  23. accusative case, acc.

  24. A case that is usually used as the direct object of a verb.

  25. For example, if English had a fully productive case system, then ball in "The man threw the ball" would most likely be in the accusative.

  26. acronym An abbreviation that is pronounced as the “word” it would spell, such as NATO.

  27. active voice The voice verb form in which the grammatical subject is the person or thing doing the action, e.g., The boy kicked the ball.

  28. Cf.

  29. passive voice.

  30. (See also Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg Voice (grammar) on Wikipedia.) acute accent A diacritic mark ( ´ ) used that can be placed above a number of letters in many languages of the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic writing systems.

  31. AD Anno Domini.

  32. Year-numbering system equivalent to CE.

  33. adjective A word like big or childish that usually serves to modify a noun.

  34. adverb A word like very, wickedly or often that usually serves to modify an adjective, verb, or other adverb.

  35. adverbial Relating to an adverb.

  36. For example, an adverbial participle is a participle that functions like an adverb in a sentence.

  37. adverbial clause A type of dependent clause that modifies a verb in an adverbial fashion.

  38. Examples are When my friend arrives, I will take him out to dinner and If it rains, I will go home (the latter example being specifically a conditional clause).

  39. agent noun A noun that denotes an agent who does the action denoted by the verb from which the noun is derived, such as "cutter" derived from "to cut".

  40. AHD The American Heritage Dictionary.

  41. For historical reasons, this abbreviation is sometimes used here to identify a respelled pronunciation that is given in enPR form.

  42. ambitransitive verb Capable of being either transitive or intransitive depending on usage.

  43. For instance, eat and read optionally take a direct object: "I eat daily", "She likes to read" (both intransitive), "Read this book", "I do not eat meat" (both transitive).

  44. Note: Although ergative verbs are ambitransitive, a single definition could only refer to an unergative verb.

  45. anglicisation, anglicization The modification of a foreign (borrowed) word to make it more English in form.

  46. animate Having a referent that includes a human or animal.

  47. Many languages (such as the Slavic languages) classify nouns based on animacy, using different inflections or words with animate and inanimate nouns.

  48. (Animacy on Wikipedia.) antepenultima The third-to-last syllable of a word, before the penultima.

  49. antonym A word with a meaning that is the opposite of a meaning of another word.

  50. For example, good is an antonym of bad.

  51. Contrast synonym.

  52. aorist A grammatical category of verbs that is often a perfective past.

  53. (See Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg aorist on Wikipedia.) apheresis The removal of a letter or sound from the beginning of a word.

  54. aphesis The removal of an initial unstressed sound from a word, the process by which escarp became scarp.

  55. Words derived in this way are called aphetic.

  56. apocopic A word form in which the word is lacking the final sound or syllable.

  57. Occurs in Italian, Spanish, and other languages.

  58. approximant A consonant sound produced by restricting the air flow through the mouth only slightly, resulting in a smooth sound.

  59. In English, the approximants are /l/, /ɹ/, /w/, /j/ (as in the initial sounds of loo, rue, woo and you).

  60. Approximants are distinguished from fricatives, in which the air is constricted enough to cause a rough, hissing or buzzing sound, and plosives, in which the air is blocked completely for a short period of time.

  61. archaic No longer in general use, but still found in some contemporary texts that aim for an antique style, like historical novels or Bible translations.

  62. For example, thee and thou are archaic pronouns, having been completely superseded by you.

  63. Archaic is a stronger term than dated, but not as strong as obsolete.

  64. (See Wiktionary:Obsolete and archaic terms.) Areal feature Distributed across multiple languages inhabiting a particular area, due to language contact among them rather than due to inheritance from a common ancestor.

  65. The term can be applied either to words (see loanword) or features of languages such as in grammar, morphology, and phonology.

  66. See also Wanderwort and stratum.

  67. article A type of determiner that is used as a grammatical indicator in some languages, and is usually central to the grammar and syntax of that language.

  68. In English, the articles are the definite article the, and the indefinite articles a and an.

  69. Some languages may have more articles, such as the French partitive articles du, de la and des, while many languages lack articles altogether.

  70. aspect English Wikipedia has an article on: Grammatical aspect A property of a verb form indicating the nature of an action as perfective (complete) or imperfective (incomplete or continuing).

  71. aspirated h In French, an initial ⟨h⟩ that is treated as a consonant; that is to say, liaison and elision are not permitted at the beginning of a word with an aspirated ⟨h⟩.

  72. assimilation English Wikipedia has an article on: Assimilation (phonology) Assimilation is a common phonological process by which one sound becomes more like a nearby sound.

  73. This can occur either within a word or between words.

  74. See also dissimilation.

  75. attributive An adjective that stands in a syntactic position where it directly modifies a noun, as opposed to a predicative adjective, which stands in a predicate position but which modifies the subject of the clause.

  76. For example, in the big green house, big and green are attributive adjectives, whereas in The house is big and green, big and green are predicative adjectives.

  77. A noun or adjective (or phrase) that names a real object with the attributes of another real object.

  78. This is in contrast to a substantive noun or adjective, which names a real object that is the actual substance named by the noun or adjective.

  79. augment English Wikipedia has an article on: Augment (linguistics) In some Indo-European languages, a prefixed vowel (usually e-; έ or ή in Greek, a- in Sanskrit) indicating a past tense in a verb.

  80. augmentative A word form expressing large size, importance, intensity, or seniority.

  81. auxiliary verb or auxiliary A verb that accompanies another verb in a clause.

  82. It is used to indicate distinctions in tense, mood, voice, aspect or other grammatical nuances.

  83. English examples are can, will, have, be.

  84. avoidance term A word standardly used to replace a taboo word.



March 21, 2020

Pete Drake Forever Merle Kilgore whose intro is gonzo, tux jacket Fierenzo, and brain in cranium not made for fission Desoxyn, Eskatrol, Placidyl ...galore



Instagram post shared by
@Doug Meet




Say it slowly, and think about the words and what they mean to Nashville, TN, the former Religious Publishing Capital of the World, and of the homemade Song Poem Publishing phenomenon, the place who made it not bizarre to tour star's houses while they were in pajamas, and the recovery story from its low ebb, which saw its artists and denizens reeling in an epidemic of almost self-mocking obviousness, the slow burnout of this country's last cocaine epidemic as work brightener, then career ender, whose effect might also have been responsible for some of those unnatural, sometimes wasteful, always unbelievably bold over-treacly waffles of which a country singer complains, his coffee in a high lonesome, at Cantrells, deviated septum ...


i just fell asleep...


then woke up and finished with these thoughts which I have managed to touch on below. 





There was a bunch of women working in a tobacco field on a high rolling hill. A lot of them were smoking pipes. I was thinking about living with somebody for all the wrong reasons

- Bob Dylan, to Cameron Crowe (1985)


"I couldn’t quite grasp what [Caribbean Wind] was about after I finished it. Sometimes you’ll write something to be very inspired, and you won’t quite finish it for one reason or another. Then you’ll go back and try and pick it up, and the inspiration is just gone. Either you get it all, and you can leave a few pieces to fill in, or you’re trying always to finish it off. Then it’s a struggle. The inspiration’s gone and you can’t remember why you started it in the first place. Frustration sets in.


I think there’s four different sets of lyrics to this, maybe I got it right, I don’t know. I had to leave it. I just dropped it. Sometimes that happens. I started it in St. Vincent when I woke up from a strange dream in the hot sun. There was a bunch of women working in a tobacco field on a high rolling hill. A lot of them were smoking pipes. I was thinking about living with somebody for all the wrong reasons."






#PeteDrake #Miltown at lunch like #talkingsteelguitar


Can't remember the last time I wrote an Epic poem about a music video:

'... [n]ot the side-effects of the [Corona], I'm viral but it must be love' ... D. Bowie



"Its the one more time revisiting top-five extraterrestrial pieces,
flawlessly frozen forever in a cryogenic deep freeze,
peopled with players whose job it is to make you feel,
this is uncomfortably numbing, not in a good way,

a Miltown at lunch, like Pete Drake and his box,
an atonal dissonant C9 or stranger,
involving floor pulleys bending  made
from a round metal bar, scissorhands clawing,
you come to, as you to the floor falling,



Can't remember the last time I wrote an Epic poem about a music video





(@dougmeet)






shot in the 60s, rediscovered (by me) in the 90s, omnipresent, omnipotent, and a thousand times more relevant than its bizarro-country-ish

facade might present. Bump Linda Gail Lewis​ up to the top of a growing list of past, former, or with a name like hers, a discography like hers, and an injection of Memphis via Ferriday re-certification

as what is mercifully, rightfully her role,



to play, Jerry Lee's once recording, later touring, sister and blood, is there when things get difficult to recall Black River, First Assembly of God, and the loss of the last touchstone to the Gene Autry dusty biopic whose reels spin in the old man's head like they did every Saturday with Jimmy Swaggart​, Mickey Gilley, 

and

Cecil Harrelson, best friend, whose nickname 'Killer,' you will barely hear, except, barely here, a comment from me, as to my irrational, associative, environmental belief in the legitimacy of the very illegitimate 'belief,' 'acknowledgement,' in the equally scientific, provable quantifier whose charts and calendars you plan your daily conquests, meals, and assignations consulting those tools as non-diviniatory tools in a technologically growing aresenal of weaponized tools, such that what you have come to see as the overriding guide for what you must do and when, from your belief that at the moment of your birth, in whichever position the stars and planets and Houses and celestial bodies and ways and strains and holes and other neighborhoods too far too visit, and I wouldn't want to live there, unless I be able to take my own 'canary in a goldmine,' with me, a chick by the name of Goldilocks, whose infuriating entitlement to require everything perfectly timed, temperatured and placed, is how certain scientists have begun to narrow down the likelihood of sustainability of this planet had it even been ten miles closer to the sun, and which has provided home for a motley group of characters whose seeming hatred for themselves and those whose tribe, sect, denomination, regiment, army, country, ocean, and space, have wanted to kill its other since they were first introduced at some function 16,000 years ago, when Creationists, through the first Home Warming Party whose apparent HOA infractions and eventual freeze outs, some say, began that which is now immutably linked to it, that which is not, nor that which the mafia would gloriously reference, if giants still walked the Earth (I mean, No Show, of course),


but don't. 


Because la Cosa Nostre is not only not concerned enough with the state of your Globe and its warming, but is delighted in the fact that you are, in order that during this period of great and unselfish guardianship, you may not notice the newly smouldering trash fires on the horizon, or behind schedule state and city government services whose workers seem exceedingly groggy or variously, overly stimulated, even experiencing some sort of communal relationship with the animals in the parking lots which they had formerly eschewed, shooed, and chewed, dependent on their liking and mood, or that of their Godfather's ...

nominative determinant and simultaneously prevented him from ever  naming faded faces, different towns, sobriquet imbued with American love of the Gangster and Cowboy in black whose ass Autry chased, whose everything touched of its own life it redoubled, twice the burden, returns unguaranteed endorsed hardcore acolytes goin' on the Instagram​ right now, as we speak, so to speak, which might introduce,


Pete Drake, his eeriness who can't be denied, David Lynch, easiest and disturbingly, most accurate, wholesome eerie solemness in inappropriately the Mother of All Mother Churches, an unholy unsanctified altar whose clergy hailed from hollers, behind favelas, if there'd been any, and definitely behaved like records, if only in the facility and ease with which they went around men,


but here,


their 'Grand' is beaumonde and their 'Opry'  is 'Ol,' derisively diminutive, like some of the short statured diminuitive stars we worship, they did the same from Lil Abner's homespinning, come homespun in its winning; forget you your Wodehouse, bite open with teeth a Moonpie and an RC Cola if you want some relief;


what and whom are macaroons and Earl Gray.



A little bit country, a little bit Rock 'n' Roll, a little bit NASA, a little bit Computer Punch Cards, inventing Japanese Word Processing, Spellchecking, and firsts, seconds, and thirds invented in Nashville, experimented on in a familiar sounding garage not in Silicone Valley (Google Webb Pierce Guitar-shaped swimming pool), but where Bob Moore (bassist)​ Stevie R​'s dad did more scales by noon than El Chapo​ Sinaloa Cartel​ and with twice the work ethic, whose sessionography is used to counterweight terabytes,

and



whose bass employs a stool for its bottom, the most louche posturing Country music shrugged off shoulder and gave up on, since miniskirts dropped from the sky into the Cumberland, after some wiseacre called Tom T. Hall wrote a story,


then tried lyrics after a night full of greasy food, and an unhealthy allegiance to view solo but as if great friends with the host of his favorite television series at the moment, whose orbit the song it was that he would inspire, credit for the greasy food can only be mentioned as unprofitable and improbably litigated at the time during the good ol' days of torts and their enjoyment of non-protectionism from the gladhanded Dixiecrats who have now switched horse in midstream and whose river runs half as deep even though its still water is ... 'Still...'  Bill Anderson, please speak up.  It is long before Michael Stipe will steal your murmur and it is way before you will have to party with that TNN puppet whose attentions seem to even befuddle you as to where do you stare and why into a dummy's eyes? 


Coming...

from Rod Steiger, or 1980s Printer's Alley dancer at Skull's Printers Alley​ Rainbow (just holla, she'll hollaback), the southern Salome whose last question before shaking off her order was always, fries?,  served up a head of John Baptist every Seventh Veiled performance  Burlesque would draw prizes for, and whose I am told by those in the know who'd know when it came to these things...  whose cards were Oscar Wilde.



Recumbent, abundant, adumbrate encumbrances, whose fundament sat ineloquent by comparement among the redundant preponderant of foods to despoil the wonderment,  moon-red banquettes, white serviettes, and skinny ecdysists who brought their erector sets in case you forgot, or were too shy to request, Nashville Burlesque.





A post shared by

Doug Meet


(@dougmeet)



@dylanfan8 Carib. Wind [Reh. w/pd st. gtr (9. 23 80)] via Graham Taylor

@dylanfan8 Carib. Wind [Reh. w/pd st. gtr (9. 23 80)] via Graham Taylor



March 19, 2020

'Misspell Tumblr correctly' PLEASE! Instagram - Facebook Get My TRASH G.O.A.T. ban #mrjyntrashgoat (look HARD @theTRASHapp - Tumblr didn't) @HAN (co-founder CEO TRASHapp)





'Misspell Tumblr correctly' PLEASE! Instagram - Facebook Get My TRASH G.O.A.T. ban #mrjyntrashgoat (look HARD @theTRASHapp - Tumblr didn't) @HAN (co-founder CEO TRASHapp)













[@dougmeet RECD. FROM @INSTAGRAM TODAY]


'Top posts from #mrjyn #trashgoat are currently hidden because the community has reported some content that may not meet Instagram's community guidelines.'

3.19.2020 to @dougmeet









Instagram out-Facebook themselves

(blacklisted by corp. with no violation previous)



this ain't #TikTok off the boat garbage, no offense, Trash. And as soon as your intern remembers how to MISSpell #Tumblr correctly (without 'e's and now featuring fewer users! eazy. noskin)




@bonethugsraremusic REAL ARTISTs @cindysherman #liltunechi #theFuneral #MamaMia



Instagram - Facebook Get My TRASH G.O.A.T. ban #mrjyntrashgoat (look HARD @theTRASHapp - Tumblr didn't)  @HAN (co-founder CEO TRASHapp)

@THETrashAPP

my Insta (blacklisted by corp. with no violation previously or now READ BELOW)




















#MRJYN BONETHUGSNHARMONY TRASHAPP VIDEO



A post shared by Doug Meet (@dougmeet) on


dougmeet



says not hers -sorry p1

check my comm.


@bonethugsraremusic re #hashtagban #FORMLETTER! #transcendental #breadthandsushi #mercurychelation *#mrjynTRASHGOAT #instaban @instagram @han



my reply to Bonethugsandharmonyrare



dougmeet

that's how i roll it. but i'm old. y'all was fast, and i was in a punk band. but i chopped and screwed ya in the day, to catch some clang clang lyrics. gang gang now, same, just different, and people oughta think there shit is always the best shit. thanks for signing on. i'll send you something from this mad app i been turning too as a sidepiece outta lazy and now she pullin me in outta eazy. congrats to uploader. been doin' since i had my mufuken panosonic red siren light trackin light ya use ta get high off of pINK fLOYD TO bth 4SEVESER



idk what to call this other than a masterpiece

 @theTRASHapp

summary/reply

3.19.20 6:14 pm cst






Facebook: re. TRASH and PHOR (summary/reply ALL @phor1 - insta & @theTRASHapp - insta, TRASH - FB, Twitter - https://twitter.com/theTRASHapp)


@mrjyn Tweet to both TRASH and PHOR