28Aug August 28, 2006 – Aegis
aegis \EE-jis\, noun:
1. Protection; support.
2. Sponsorship; patronage.
3. Guidance, direction, or control.
4. A shield or protective armor; — applied in mythology to the shield of Zeus.
It is this ideal of the human under the aegis of something higher which seems to me to provide the strongest counterpressure against the fragmentation and barbarization of our world.
— Ted J. Smith III (Editor), In Defense of Tradition: Collected Shorter Writings of Richard M. Weaver, 1929-1963
A third round of talks is scheduled to begin on May 23rd in New York under the aegis of the United Nations.
— “Denktash declared head after rival withdraws”, Irish Times, April 21, 2000
In real life, Lang’s father was commercially astute and fantastically hardworking, and under his aegis the construction business flourished.
— Patrick McGilligan, Fritz Lang: The Nature of the Beast
Aegis derives from the Greek aigis, the shield of Zeus, from aix, aig-, “a goat,” many primitive shields being goatskin-covered.
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for aegis
Finally, a semi-normal word. Apparently, Street Fighter III has a character with a signature move called the Aegis Reflector or something because there are a metric shitload of videos of this move being performed. There’s also a character or mecha in Gundam Wing called Aegis or something because that’s a constant recurring theme today too. I’m going to include a couple of videos because there wasn’t anything that just jumped out at me as the clear winner (not like Hoopered from Robustious the other day). Enjoy!
First, Kids jumping up walls to, believe it or not, French hip hop. The PK in the name is short for Parkour (or freerunning) and this is a training video or something.
Second, this is what happens when you take your action figures out of the box. Mint-in-Box isn’t about collection, it’s about protection!
Third, bored Filipina has too much fun with a web cam and a magic mic. Not that kind of fun, perv! It’s probably better if you speak tagalog, but it’s not that great one way or another. This is mostly included because the song she’s sings was all over the search results and this was the most interesting version of it. Plus, she’s not a bad singer.
And, finally, cute Korean Christian kids. Just cuz, well, daycare babies = cute and they are, they believe, under the aegis of God, or Jesus, or whatever, and the song is a little catchy.
27Aug August 27, 2006 – Habitue
The screaming you hear is me trying in vain to continue this experiment. I am now (not having searched for today’s word) at a 75% failure rate for finding films using the real word of the day. That’s because today’s word is:
Habitue \huh-BICH-oo-ay; huh-bich-oo-AY\, noun:
One who habitually frequents a place.
Here you will meet Disco Bean . . . , a 70s dance-club habitue who spends his days in an empty warehouse polishing his Latin hustle moves and pretending it’s still 1978 and he’s the next John Travolta.
— Stephen Holden, “The Search for One-Eye Jimmy”, New York Times, June 21, 1996
Or as one jaded habitue of El Casbah observes when an unfamiliar face appears in the club: “She’s new to cafe society.”
— Stephen Holden, “Cafe Society”, New York Times, July 18, 1997
In the public house kept by Jesper Darkes, “zealous partizans in the cause of Liberty,” as one habitue called them, met day and night, laying plans, discussing whether this man or that could be trusted or whether he was spying for the government, speculating on what could be done when the British military arrived, as it surely would.
— Richard M. Ketchum, Saratoga: Turning Point of America’s Revolutionary War
Habitue is from the past participle of French habituer,
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for habitue
Sigh. It’s pointless, but let’s try the search…Huh. Well, there are actually many hits, but they are all for habit or habitual or in Spanish. Well, I guess I spoke too soon. The idea of this site was to use the word of the day simply as a method of finding interesting videos. It’s not, as my dear wife assumed, to find a defining video, so I guess all these qualify. This should be interesting.
Here’s a nice funny British comedy (Britcom?) troupe video. Now with 100% more rubber ass.
Find it here.
Check out the other “Young Guns” videos along the right-hand side bar. See more at their homepage.
26Aug August 26, 2006 – Provender
It’s just not fair.
provender \PROV-uhn-duhr\, noun:
1. Dry food for domestic animals, such as hay, straw, corn, oats, or a mixture of ground grain; feed.
2. Food or provisions.
It turns out that he and thousands of other German immigrants have been acting as pre-invasion intelligence-gatherers, ensuring that “the German Army knew almost to a bale of hay what provender lay between London and the coast.”
— Niall Ferguson, The Pity of War
Frances Trollope, Captain Marryat, Colonel Basil Hall and Charles Dickens in 1842 all commented on the way Americans wolfed down their provender as fast as possible, cramming the cornbread in their sloppy maws and, worse, doing so in grim silence, punctuated only by the noise of slurps, grunts; scraping knives and hacking coughs.
— Simon Schama, “Them and US”, The Guardian, March 29, 2003
Provender comes from Old French, from Late Latin praebenda (prae and pro being confused), “a daily allowance of provisions,” from praebere, contraction of praehibere, “to hold forth, to offer, to afford,” from prae-, “before” + habere, “to have, to hold.”
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for provender
This really isn’t fair. Two no-tubers in a row. Google’s also useless. That Video Site? “No Results Yielded” Nothing on bolt.com or Zippy.com, which I suppose is just as well since this is supposed to be TUBE of the day, not Zippy of the Day or Bolt of the day. Sigh. OK, Robin, to the Thesaurus! OK, nevermind. Thesauri suck. Back to the FWFSW/FWSSW rule I suppose, which today gives us “dry food” and “food.” Yikes. I don’t think I am going to like this. Well, they can’t all be gems. I am going to make an executive decision and replace the FWFSW with “fodder” as I feel that is a decent substitute and because the two FW’s are essentially the same.
Let’s go then.
“Fodder:” Oh. Dear. God. I think I should have chosen a different synonym. Fodder just has too many uses, but I made the decision, so I will stick with it. Sigh. Put on your tinfoil hats for this one. This dude’s serious. Check out the right hand column on the actual YouTube site to see more of this whackjobs fruitcake ideas.
The Truth Starts Here! *cough, cough*
Okay, that’s done. As broad as this may be, now for “Food:”
Oh. Dear. God. Again.
As one commenter said, “Beware the 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse….they will come in a form unexpected….” You will be singing this all day long. I don’t know where it is from (aside from being British), or why they have stained my computer so, but now they have you too. I’m sorry – if I don’t pass it along a creepy technicolor girl will climb through my monitor seven days from now.
It’s here. (Bonus: I’m not sure if this is better or worse.)
Please be a normal word tomorrow. This might be a very bad experiment.
25Aug August 25, 2006 – Robustious
Tough one today. Not having searched yet, I might have to resort to a back-up plan already.
robustious \roh-BUHS-chuhs\, adjective:
1. Boisterous; vigorous.
2. Coarse; rough; crude.
. . .the robustious romantic figure comparable to John Willoughby in Sense and Sensibility–he comes in with dash, then proves a temptation to the heroine but is an eventual disappointment.
— Stanley Kauffmann, “Emma”, New Republic, August 19, 1996
When the meaning of the disturbance became clear to him he placed a hand beside his mouth and shouted: “Hey! Frank!” in such a robustious voice that the feeble clamor of the natives was drowned and silenced.
— O. Henry, Cabbages and Kings
Here he has seemingly swilled some of Falstaff’s sack and has had robustious, fiery fun.
— Stanley Kauffmann, “Star-Crossed Lovers”, New Republic, January 4, 1999
Robustious derives from Latin robustus, “oaken, hence strong, powerful, firm,” from robur, “oak.”
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for robustious
Uh Oh: “No Videos found for ‘Robustious'”
So now we try Google
Uh Oh: “Your search – Robustious did not return any results.”
I did find, during a Google Web Search, that Dictionary.com is repeating words of the day. Seems a bit dishonest, I feel. Oh well. Onward.
YouTube and Google are both “no go.” I can’t access That Video Site from work, so I may look later.
Now we come to some decisions. Dictionary.com is also Thesaurus.com. So I could try Tubing the top synonym for Robustious. Let’s try that.
Uh Oh! No results found for robustious.
Did you mean rumbustious? WHAT?!
Damn. OK. Maybe I should have gone this route first. The very definition of a word is some word or words that mean approximately the same thing. I could tube the First Word of the First Sense of the word (which I now dub the FWFSW rule) and see what we hit. The logic behind this is the same as the “upside-down triangle rule” of journalism which is that information should be provided in a most important to least important continuum as you read the article so that you could stop at any point after the first three paragraphs and have the majority of the information, at least, in broad strokes. I assume Dictionary work operates on the similar priniciple, placing defining words in most accurate to least accurate order in the definition to give the closest definition with increasing refinement as you travel down the list.
In this case, the target word is “Boisterous.” This word should hit a gold mine of content, but before I continue, I feel there is a philosophical problem inherent in the FWFSW rule. The problem is that a word will have multiple meanings (senses) and thus, Tubing a word will hit results for any sense in which the word is used. Robustious has two meanings, which are fairly counter to each other. Should I amend the rule to FWFSW/FWSSW (First Word of the First Sense of the Word/First Word of the Second Sense of the Word) resulting in two searches and two videos (or as many as there are senses? Would that be fair and make up in quantity what YouTube won’t provide in quality? For now, that seems fairest, so our searches will be for “Boisterous” and “Coarse.” (I must admit to a little trepidation with the FWSSW since that could lead to an NSFW place… Oh well. Onward.)
Okay: “Boisterous”
This is a kid’s show spoof with some boister to it. Boisterous is actually a difficult word on The Tube. Nearly everything relates to drunkenness and that just seemed to easy for TOTD.
Find it here.
I had much more luck with “Coarse.” Aside from many misspellings of “course,” I was able to find this truly NSFW gem. If you watch it at work (no nudity), make sure to use your head phones. It has a very kids in the hall feel to it. Definite winner!
Find it here.
I hope tomorrow’s word is much friendlier!
24Aug August 24, 2006 – Denizen
denizen \DEN-uh-zuhn\, noun:
1. A dweller; an inhabitant.
2. One that frequents a particular place.
3. [Chiefly British] An alien granted certain rights of citizenship.
4. An animal, plant, etc. that has become naturalized.
Goethe, who visited Berlin only once, found the “wit and irony” of its denizens quite remarkable.
— Peter Gay, My German Question
But he will know one thing about what it means to be an American, because he has known the raw continent, and not as tourist but as denizen.
— “Noted With Pleasure”, New York Times, February 2, 1992
So Charlie McCreevy is a regular denizen of the “Dáil bar.”
— Kathy Sheridan, “Feeling a little Bullish”, Irish Times, April 22, 2000
Denizen comes from Anglo-French denzein, “(one) living within (a city or state),” from Old French denz, “within,” from Late Latin deintus, “from within,” from Latin de-, “from” + intus, “within.”
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for denizen
I chose this one because it is mildly funny, but mostly because of the name “Denizens of Slack.” I participate in the SlackCast, official podcast of the Domain of Slack. The naming coincidence was too much for me to resist. This is a funny video, though I wish it were longer and could be more developed with these characters. There is a great deal of untapped potential here. Plus the song is quite catchy. Enjoy!
Find it here.