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View Full Version : [Dixonary] Vote in Round 2867, ABACULUS


Efrem G Mallach
January 26th, 2018, 08:40 PM
Folks,

Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is correct. There may be alternate realities in which the other eleven are correct, but we don't know about them (unless eleven players are channeling them). They have been edited for format consistency and are in ascending order by character count, which may not correspond to visual length in your email display font. Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as, but not necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality) by public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows the list.

1. a small metal gate.

2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.

3. a small tile used in a mosaic.

4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.

5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.

6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).

7. a number leaving the same remainder when divided into two others.

8. computer age version of an abacus with inbuilt algorithms available by squeezing the balls

9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by Charles Babbage (1791-1871).

10. the primordial matter of the universe, orig. conceived as composed of neutrons at high temperature and density.

11. a subtractive timepiece used to show time remaining until a deadline, commonly used to mark time at sporting events.

12. an intermediate irrigation ditch in ancient Egypt, probably fed from the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turn feeding into a field ditch.

The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday, Jan. 28, in US EST. According to timeanddate.com <http://timeanddate.com/>, that is:



and other times in other places. You may want to check the conversion that applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't claim to be perfect. The North American and European times look right to me, but I'm less sure of the Antipodean conversions.

New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a definition for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who happened not to. Full rules at http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules <http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules> .

Happy voting,

Efrem


Efrem G. Mallach
emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
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Judy Madnick
January 26th, 2018, 09:18 PM
I promise that I did read'em all -- but I have no clue, so I'll vote for the first two:

1. a small metal gate.


2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.

Judy

Today is the first day of the rest of your life.

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—Keith Hale—
January 26th, 2018, 09:39 PM
I like the long ones. 11 & 12, please.
-Keith-

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Tim B
January 27th, 2018, 05:31 AM
9 and 11, please.

Best wishes,
Tim Bourne.

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Tim Lodge
January 27th, 2018, 08:29 AM
I'll take 2 and 6, please.

2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.

6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).

-- Tim L

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Dave Cunningham
January 27th, 2018, 08:43 AM
4 and 9 (and 8 gets a special award)


Dave


On Friday, January 26, 2018 at 9:40:13 PM UTC-5, Efrem wrote:

> Folks,
>
> Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is correct.
> There may be alternate realities in which the other eleven are correct, but
> we don't know about them (unless eleven players are channeling them). They
> have been edited for format consistency and are in ascending order by
> character count, which may not correspond to visual length in your email
> display font. Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as,
> but not necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality) by
> public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows the list.
>
> 1. a small metal gate.
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
> 5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.
>
> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>
> 7. a number leaving the same remainder when divided into two others.
>
> 8. computer age version of an abacus with inbuilt algorithms available by
> squeezing the balls
>
> 9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by
> Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>
> 10. the primordial matter of the universe, orig. conceived as composed of
> neutrons at high temperature and density.
>
> 11. a subtractive timepiece used to show time remaining until a deadline,
> commonly used to mark time at sporting events.
>
> 12. an intermediate irrigation ditch in ancient Egypt, probably fed from
> the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turn feeding into a field ditch.
>
> The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday, Jan. 28, in
> US EST. According to timeanddate.com, that is:
>
>
> and other times in other places. You may want to check the conversion that
> applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't claim to be perfect. The
> North American and European times look right to me, but I'm less sure of
> the Antipodean conversions.
>
> New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a definition
> for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who happened not
> to. Full rules at http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules .
>
> Happy voting,
>
> Efrem
>
>
> Efrem G. Mallach
> emal... (AT) verizon (DOT) net <javascript:>
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>
>

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France International/Mike Shefler
January 27th, 2018, 08:46 AM
I'll go with 4 and 6.


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Johnb - co.uk
January 27th, 2018, 09:47 AM
I'll follow Judy, but double her (and probably quit) with #3 and #4 please

*JohnnyB*
On 27/01/2018 02:40, Efrem G Mallach wrote:



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Ryan McGill
January 27th, 2018, 04:50 PM
To paraphrase Bill & Ted poorly: 6 & 9, Dudes.



> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>
> 9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by
> Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>
>

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Shani Naylor
January 27th, 2018, 09:08 PM
I'll vote for 2 & 4.



2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.

4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.






On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 3:40 PM, Efrem G Mallach <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>
wrote:

> Folks,
>
> Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is correct.
> There may be alternate realities in which the other eleven are correct, but
> we don't know about them (unless eleven players are channeling them). They
> have been edited for format consistency and are in ascending order by
> character count, which may not correspond to visual length in your email
> display font. Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as,
> but not necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality) by
> public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows the list.
>
> 1. a small metal gate.
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
> 5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.
>
> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>
> 7. a number leaving the same remainder when divided into two others.
>
> 8. computer age version of an abacus with inbuilt algorithms available by
> squeezing the balls
>
> 9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by
> Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>
> 10. the primordial matter of the universe, orig. conceived as composed of
> neutrons at high temperature and density.
>
> 11. a subtractive timepiece used to show time remaining until a deadline,
> commonly used to mark time at sporting events.
>
> 12. an intermediate irrigation ditch in ancient Egypt, probably fed from
> the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turn feeding into a field ditch.
>
> The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday, Jan. 28, in
> US EST. According to timeanddate.com, that is:
>
>
> and other times in other places. You may want to check the conversion that
> applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't claim to be perfect. The
> North American and European times look right to me, but I'm less sure of
> the Antipodean conversions.
>
> New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a definition
> for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who happened not
> to. Full rules at http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules .
>
> Happy voting,
>
> Efrem
>
>
> Efrem G. Mallach
> emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "Dixonary" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com.
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>

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Shani Naylor
January 27th, 2018, 09:08 PM
I'll vote for 2 & 4.



2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.

4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.






On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 3:40 PM, Efrem G Mallach <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>
wrote:

> Folks,
>
> Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is correct.
> There may be alternate realities in which the other eleven are correct, but
> we don't know about them (unless eleven players are channeling them). They
> have been edited for format consistency and are in ascending order by
> character count, which may not correspond to visual length in your email
> display font. Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as,
> but not necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality) by
> public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows the list.
>
> 1. a small metal gate.
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
> 5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.
>
> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>
> 7. a number leaving the same remainder when divided into two others.
>
> 8. computer age version of an abacus with inbuilt algorithms available by
> squeezing the balls
>
> 9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by
> Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>
> 10. the primordial matter of the universe, orig. conceived as composed of
> neutrons at high temperature and density.
>
> 11. a subtractive timepiece used to show time remaining until a deadline,
> commonly used to mark time at sporting events.
>
> 12. an intermediate irrigation ditch in ancient Egypt, probably fed from
> the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turn feeding into a field ditch.
>
> The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday, Jan. 28, in
> US EST. According to timeanddate.com, that is:
>
>
> and other times in other places. You may want to check the conversion that
> applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't claim to be perfect. The
> North American and European times look right to me, but I'm less sure of
> the Antipodean conversions.
>
> New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a definition
> for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who happened not
> to. Full rules at http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules .
>
> Happy voting,
>
> Efrem
>
>
> Efrem G. Mallach
> emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "Dixonary" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com.
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>

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Shani Naylor
January 27th, 2018, 09:11 PM
I'll vote for 2 & 4.



2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.

4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.





On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 3:40 PM, Efrem G Mallach <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>
wrote:

> Folks,
>
> Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is correct.
> There may be alternate realities in which the other eleven are correct, but
> we don't know about them (unless eleven players are channeling them). They
> have been edited for format consistency and are in ascending order by
> character count, which may not correspond to visual length in your email
> display font. Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as,
> but not necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality) by
> public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows the list.
>
> 1. a small metal gate.
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
> 5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.
>
> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>
> 7. a number leaving the same remainder when divided into two others.
>
> 8. computer age version of an abacus with inbuilt algorithms available by
> squeezing the balls
>
> 9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by
> Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>
> 10. the primordial matter of the universe, orig. conceived as composed of
> neutrons at high temperature and density.
>
> 11. a subtractive timepiece used to show time remaining until a deadline,
> commonly used to mark time at sporting events.
>
> 12. an intermediate irrigation ditch in ancient Egypt, probably fed from
> the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turn feeding into a field ditch.
>
> The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday, Jan. 28, in
> US EST. According to timeanddate.com, that is:
>
>
> and other times in other places. You may want to check the conversion that
> applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't claim to be perfect. The
> North American and European times look right to me, but I'm less sure of
> the Antipodean conversions.
>
> New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a definition
> for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who happened not
> to. Full rules at http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules .
>
> Happy voting,
>
> Efrem
>
>
> Efrem G. Mallach
> emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "Dixonary" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com.
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>

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Tony Abell
January 28th, 2018, 01:15 AM
I'll take two of the shorter ones: 3 and 4:

> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.

> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.


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Johnb - co.uk
January 28th, 2018, 03:26 AM
Are you sure about that?Â* (3 votes in 3 minutes)

*JohnnyB*
On 28/01/2018 03:11, Shani Naylor wrote:
> I'll vote for 2 & 4.
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 3:40 PM, Efrem G Mallach <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
> <mailto:emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>> wrote:
>
> Folks,
>
> Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is
> correct. There may be alternate realities in which the other
> eleven are correct, but we don't know about them (unless eleven
> players are channeling them). They have been edited for format
> consistency and are in ascending order by character count, which
> may not correspond to visual length in your email display font.
> Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as, but not
> necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality)
> by public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows
> the list.
>
> 1. a small metalÂ*gate.
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
> 5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.
>
> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of timeÂ*(see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>
> 7. a number leaving the same remainderÂ*when divided into two others.
>
> 8. computer age version of an abacus withÂ*inbuilt algorithms
> available by squeezing the balls
>
> 9. a short-lived popular name for theÂ*difference engine designed
> by Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>
> 10. the primordial matter of theÂ*universe, orig. conceived as
> composed of neutrons at high temperature andÂ*density.
>
> 11. a subtractive timepiece used to showÂ*time remaining until a
> deadline, commonly used to mark time at sportingÂ*events.
>
> 12. an intermediate irrigation ditch inÂ*ancient Egypt, probably
> fed from the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turnÂ*feeding into a
> field ditch.
>
> The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday,
> Jan. 28, in US EST. According to timeanddate.com
> <http://timeanddate.com>,Â*that is:
>
>
> and other times in other places. You may want to check the
> conversion that applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't
> claim to be perfect. The North American and European times look
> right to me, but I'm less sure of the Antipodean conversions.
>
> New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a
> definition for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who
> happened not to.Â*Full rules at
> http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules
> <http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules>Â*.
>
> Happy voting,
>
> Efrem
>
>
> Efrem G. Mallach
> emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net <mailto:emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
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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
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> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>
>
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Shani Naylor
January 28th, 2018, 03:44 AM
Sorry, the first two looked like they hadn't been sent. At least I didn't
change my vote...

On 28/01/2018 10:27 PM, "Johnb - co.uk" <johnb (AT) john-barrs (DOT) co.uk> wrote:

> Are you sure about that? (3 votes in 3 minutes)
> *JohnnyB*
> On 28/01/2018 03:11, Shani Naylor wrote:
>
> I'll vote for 2 & 4.
>
>
>
> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>
> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 3:40 PM, Efrem G Mallach <emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net>
> wrote:
>
>> Folks,
>>
>> Here are exactly a dozen definitions of ABACULUS. One of them is correct.
>> There may be alternate realities in which the other eleven are correct, but
>> we don't know about them (unless eleven players are channeling them). They
>> have been edited for format consistency and are in ascending order by
>> character count, which may not correspond to visual length in your email
>> display font. Please vote for two that you like for any reason (such as,
>> but not necessarily, thinking that they might be correct in our reality) by
>> public Reply to this message before the deadline that follows the list.
>>
>> 1. a small metal gate.
>>
>> 2. [Obs. Med.] the spine.
>>
>> 3. a small tile used in a mosaic.
>>
>> 4. an ancient grave mound; a barrow.
>>
>> 5. a profoundly unwise person or policy.
>>
>> 6. a grain of sand, a measure of time (see _Cumaean Sibyl_).
>>
>> 7. a number leaving the same remainder when divided into two others.
>>
>> 8. computer age version of an abacus with inbuilt algorithms available by
>> squeezing the balls
>>
>> 9. a short-lived popular name for the difference engine designed by
>> Charles Babbage (1791-1871).
>>
>> 10. the primordial matter of the universe, orig. conceived as composed of
>> neutrons at high temperature and density.
>>
>> 11. a subtractive timepiece used to show time remaining until a deadline,
>> commonly used to mark time at sporting events.
>>
>> 12. an intermediate irrigation ditch in ancient Egypt, probably fed from
>> the Nile by Archimedean screw and in turn feeding into a field ditch.
>>
>> The deadline for voting is 47+ hours from now: 9 pm on Sunday, Jan. 28,
>> in US EST. According to timeanddate.com, that is:
>>
>>
>> and other times in other places. You may want to check the conversion
>> that applies to you. That site, though good, doesn't claim to be perfect.
>> The North American and European times look right to me, but I'm less sure
>> of the Antipodean conversions.
>>
>> New players are welcome to vote, even if you didn't submit a definition
>> for this word - as are, of course, veteran players who happened not
>> to. Full rules at http://www.dixonary.net/game-rules-and-advice/rules .
>>
>> Happy voting,
>>
>> Efrem
>>
>>
>> Efrem G. Mallach
>> emallach (AT) verizon (DOT) net
>> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
>>
>> --
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
>> "Dixonary" group.
>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
>> email to dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com.
>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>>
>
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