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View Full Version : [Dixonary] Round 2860 results: GLOZE


Efrem G Mallach
December 27th, 2017, 03:02 PM
Fellow players,

The correct definition here was the only pure verb, "to make excuses for." It does indeed come, as John Barrs's similar definition 14 suggests, from gloss as in a comment, via the Middle English verb glosen meaning "to flatter." It was Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day almost exactly eight years ago - on January 3, 2010. Dictionary.com <http://dictionary.com/> has several examples of its usage, including "Any attempt to gloze the situation, he felt, would be futile" from The Black Bag by Louis Joseph Vance.

John's definition garnered three votes. Add two points to his score for divining the correct meaning of the word, and his total of five makes him our next dealer. Tim Lodge was the only other player to vote for its real meaning. Shani Naylor earns "winnah" honors with a natural 4 for "a drowsy, stupid state of body or mind."

Full results:

1. an earthen dam. From Shepherdson, N. who voted 3, 7. Voted for by: Madnick, J. Score: 1.

2. [Scots] marshland. From Abell, T. who did not vote. Voted for by: Cunningham, D.; Shefler, M. Score: 2.

3. [Scots] rime, frost. From Cunningham, D. who voted 2, 10. Voted for by: Shepherdson, N.; Shefler, M.; McGill, R. Score: 3.

4. to make excuses for. From Dictionary who did not vote. Voted for by: Lodge, T.; Barrs, J. Score: D2.

5. a gas-permeable membrane. From Hale, K. who voted 8, 14. Voted for by: Carson, C.; McGill, R. Score: 2.

6. satin-twilled woolen fabric. From Madnick, J. who voted 1, 8. Voted for by: Naylor, S.; Carson, C. Score: 2.

7. a drowsy, stupid state of body or mind. From Naylor, S. who voted 6, 14. Voted for by: Shepherdson, N.; Stevens, G.; Lodge, T.; Widdis, D. Score: 4..

8. a bonding agent applied to a wall prior to applying stucco. From Shefler, M. who voted 2, 3. Voted for by: Hale, K.; Madnick, J.; Bourne, T. Score: 3.

9. a person who has a vested interest in a piece of legislation. From Stevens, G. who voted 7, 10. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

10. a groove inside the end of a barrel or cask into which the head is set. From Carson, C. who voted 5, 6. Voted for by: Cunningham, D.; Stevens, G.; Widdis, D. Score: 3.

11. an alternative to glaze, a finish for pottery that cures at room temperature. From Bourne, T. who voted 8, 14. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

12. a former measurement unit of land area in Tsarist Russia, equivalent to 1.63 acres or 0.66 hectare. From Lodge, T. who voted *4*, 7. Voted for by: None. Score: 2.

13. the apex of the flower stalk, from which the organs of the flower grow, or into which they are inserted. From Widdis, D. who voted 7, 10. Voted for by: Barrs, J. Score: 1.

14. a gloss, that is, an explanation of, or comment upon, some uncommon word, phrase or idea; also to gloss in that sense; to provide a gloss. From Barrs, J. who voted *4*, 13. Voted for by: Hale, K.; Naylor, S.; Bourne, T. Score: 5.

No definition from McGill, R. who voted 3, 5. Voted for by: N/A. Score: 0.

It's all yours, John.

Efrem


Efrem G. Mallach
emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
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Shani Naylor
December 28th, 2017, 02:07 PM
Johnny, are you out there? It's been nearly 24 hours since Efrem posted
his results. I can step in and deal if necessary.

Shani

On 28/12/2017 10:02 AM, "Efrem G Mallach" <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net> wrote:

Fellow players,

The correct definition here was the only pure verb, "to make excuses for."
It does indeed come, as John Barrs's similar definition 14 suggests, from
*gloss* as in a comment, via the Middle English verb *glosen* meaning "to
flatter." It was Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day almost exactly eight
years ago - on January 3, 2010. Dictionary.com has several examples of its
usage, including "Any attempt to gloze the situation, he felt, would be
futile" from *The Black Bag* by Louis Joseph Vance.

John's definition garnered three votes. Add two points to his score for
divining the correct meaning of the word, and his total of five makes him
our next dealer. Tim Lodge was the only other player to vote for its real
meaning. Shani Naylor earns "winnah" honors with a natural 4 for "a drowsy,
stupid state of body or mind."

Full results:

1. an earthen dam. From Shepherdson, N. who voted 3, 7. Voted for by:
Madnick, J. Score: 1.

2. [Scots] marshland. From Abell, T. who did not vote. Voted for by:
Cunningham, D.; Shefler, M. Score: 2.

3. [Scots] rime, frost. From Cunningham, D. who voted 2, 10. Voted for by:
Shepherdson, N.; Shefler, M.; McGill, R. Score: 3.

4. to make excuses for. From Dictionary who did not vote. Voted for by:
Lodge, T.; Barrs, J. Score: D2.

5. a gas-permeable membrane. From Hale, K. who voted 8, 14. Voted for by:
Carson, C.; McGill, R. Score: 2.

6. satin-twilled woolen fabric. From Madnick, J. who voted 1, 8. Voted for
by: Naylor, S.; Carson, C. Score: 2.

7. a drowsy, stupid state of body or mind. From Naylor, S. who voted 6, 14.
Voted for by: Shepherdson, N.; Stevens, G.; Lodge, T.; Widdis, D. Score: 4.

8. a bonding agent applied to a wall prior to applying stucco. From
Shefler, M. who voted 2, 3. Voted for by: Hale, K.; Madnick, J.; Bourne, T.
Score: 3.

9. a person who has a vested interest in a piece of legislation. From
Stevens, G. who voted 7, 10. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

10. a groove inside the end of a barrel or cask into which the head is set.
From Carson, C. who voted 5, 6. Voted for by: Cunningham, D.; Stevens, G.;
Widdis, D. Score: 3.

11. an alternative to glaze, a finish for pottery that cures at room
temperature. From Bourne, T. who voted 8, 14. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.

12. a former measurement unit of land area in Tsarist Russia, equivalent to
1.63 acres or 0.66 hectare. From Lodge, T. who voted *4*, 7. Voted for by:
None. Score: 2.

13. the apex of the flower stalk, from which the organs of the flower grow,
or into which they are inserted. From Widdis, D. who voted 7, 10. Voted for
by: Barrs, J. Score: 1.

14. a gloss, that is, an explanation of, or comment upon, some uncommon
word, phrase or idea; also to gloss in that sense; to provide a gloss. From
Barrs, J. who voted *4*, 13. Voted for by: Hale, K.; Naylor, S.; Bourne, T.
Score: 5.

No definition from McGill, R. who voted 3, 5. Voted for by: N/A. Score: 0.

It's all yours, John.

Efrem


Efrem G. Mallach
emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
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Efrem G Mallach
December 28th, 2017, 03:25 PM
I sent John a heads-up that he was nearly certain to be the next dealer about an hour and a half before the deadline for voting, or three and a half hours before I sent out the results. (People eat dinner late in Rome, but not so late that I could send them out before leaving, and one does not want to rush a good Italian meal.) That was around 5:30 pm UK time, so he was unlikely to have gone to bed for the night. I didn't get any sort of private reply, either.

I think we can give him until sometime tomorrow, though. Here's hoping he shows up, and it turns out to have been nothing worse than an Internet outage.

Efrem


Efrem G. Mallach
emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

> On Dec 28, 2017, at 3:07 PM, Shani Naylor <shani.naylor (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote:
>
> Johnny, are you out there? It's been nearly 24 hours since Efrem posted his results. I can step in and deal if necessary.
>
> Shani
>
> On 28/12/2017 10:02 AM, "Efrem G Mallach" <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net <mailto:emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>> wrote:
> Fellow players,
>
> The correct definition here was the only pure verb, "to make excuses for." It does indeed come, as John Barrs's similar definition 14 suggests, from gloss as in a comment, via the Middle English verb glosen meaning "to flatter." It was Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day almost exactly eight years ago - on January 3, 2010. Dictionary.com <http://dictionary.com/> has several examples of its usage, including "Any attempt to gloze the situation, he felt, would be futile" from The Black Bag by Louis Joseph Vance.
>
> John's definition garnered three votes. Add two points to his score for divining the correct meaning of the word, and his total of five makes him our next dealer. Tim Lodge was the only other player to vote for its real meaning. Shani Naylor earns "winnah" honors with a natural 4 for "a drowsy, stupid state of body or mind."
>
> Full results:
>
> 1. an earthen dam. From Shepherdson, N. who voted 3, 7. Voted for by: Madnick, J. Score: 1.
>
> 2. [Scots] marshland. From Abell, T. who did not vote. Voted for by: Cunningham, D.; Shefler, M. Score: 2.
>
> 3. [Scots] rime, frost. From Cunningham, D. who voted 2, 10. Voted for by: Shepherdson, N.; Shefler, M.; McGill, R. Score: 3.
>
> 4. to make excuses for. From Dictionary who did not vote. Voted for by: Lodge, T.; Barrs, J. Score: D2.
>
> 5. a gas-permeable membrane. From Hale, K. who voted 8, 14. Voted for by: Carson, C.; McGill, R. Score: 2.
>
> 6. satin-twilled woolen fabric. From Madnick, J. who voted 1, 8. Voted for by: Naylor, S.; Carson, C. Score: 2.
>
> 7. a drowsy, stupid state of body or mind. From Naylor, S. who voted 6, 14. Voted for by: Shepherdson, N.; Stevens, G.; Lodge, T.; Widdis, D. Score: 4.
>
> 8. a bonding agent applied to a wall prior to applying stucco. From Shefler, M. who voted 2, 3. Voted for by: Hale, K.; Madnick, J.; Bourne, T. Score: 3.
>
> 9. a person who has a vested interest in a piece of legislation. From Stevens, G. who voted 7, 10. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.
>
> 10. a groove inside the end of a barrel or cask into which the head is set. From Carson, C. who voted 5, 6. Voted for by: Cunningham, D.; Stevens, G..; Widdis, D. Score: 3.
>
> 11. an alternative to glaze, a finish for pottery that cures at room temperature. From Bourne, T. who voted 8, 14. Voted for by: None. Score: 0.
>
> 12. a former measurement unit of land area in Tsarist Russia, equivalent to 1.63 acres or 0.66 hectare. From Lodge, T. who voted *4*, 7. Voted for by: None. Score: 2.
>
> 13. the apex of the flower stalk, from which the organs of the flower grow, or into which they are inserted. From Widdis, D. who voted 7, 10. Voted for by: Barrs, J. Score: 1.
>
> 14. a gloss, that is, an explanation of, or comment upon, some uncommon word, phrase or idea; also to gloss in that sense; to provide a gloss. From Barrs, J. who voted *4*, 13. Voted for by: Hale, K.; Naylor, S.; Bourne, T. Score: 5.
>
> No definition from McGill, R. who voted 3, 5. Voted for by: N/A. Score: 0..
>
> It's all yours, John.
>
> Efrem
>
>
> Efrem G. Mallach
> emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net <mailto:emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>
>
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> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com <mailto:dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com>.
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