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July 15th, 2004, 02:17 PM
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Quote:
Originally posted by Slynky:
Scrabble player?! Kewl! Can't find anyone who can handle me in my circle of friends. Be nice if there was an Online place to play Scrabble and have some fun!
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There is. Right here. It is Yahoo Literati. It is scrabble just without the scrabble name. My mom used to play all the time. It is alot of fun. 
__________________
Ragnarok - Hevordian Story Thread
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I think...therefore I am confused.
They were armed. With guns, said Omari.
Canadians. With guns. And a warship. What is this world coming to?
The dreaded derelict dwelling two ton devil bunny!
Every ship can be a minesweeper... Once
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July 15th, 2004, 03:35 PM
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Major General
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Yes I find if you know a bit of latin you have a vague idea of what romance words are. a large proportion of english is stolen from french (albeit a thousand years ago) almost the rest is germanic (which I mostly know from military study) and the rest are words the empire stole from anyone they conquered.
edit: just realised I am doing what Alneyan warned of, turning this into a etymological discussion.
[ July 15, 2004, 14:38: Message edited by: Randallw ]
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July 15th, 2004, 03:56 PM
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Quote:
Originally posted by Ragnarok:
quote: Originally posted by Slynky:
Scrabble player?! Kewl! Can't find anyone who can handle me in my circle of friends. Be nice if there was an Online place to play Scrabble and have some fun!
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There is. Right here. It is Yahoo Literati. It is scrabble just without the scrabble name. My mom used to play all the time. It is alot of fun. More correctly, it's similar to Scrabble (having taken a look). The values for the letters are different (a 'Q', for example, is worth 5 points instead of 10) and the board is laid out differently. I wonder how challenges really work out on line (I played Hearts for a while till I learned people loaded card-counting cheats programs in a secondary window). And, of course, a timer would be nice (I didn't verify the existance of one in the Literati game).
But in a world where the makers of Scrabble have chosen NOT to give out rights to the game Online, I guess one does what one can to fill the void.
Thanks, Ragnarok .
__________________
ALLIANCE, n. In international politics, the union of two thieves who have their hands so deeply inserted in each other's pocket that they cannot separately plunder a third. (Ambrose Bierce)
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July 15th, 2004, 05:23 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
I'm pretty sure you can play scrabble Online... do a google search, looks like there are more than a few places...
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July 15th, 2004, 05:23 PM
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Quote:
Originally posted by Slynky:
More correctly, it's similar to Scrabble (having taken a look).
[snip]
And, of course, a timer would be nice (I didn't verify the existance of one in the Literati game).
Thanks, Ragnarok.
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I didn't compare the two closely as far as layout and points of letters.
And if I recall correctly the timer does exsist on there and you can set it to anything you want. It is optional, however. It does come in handy as some players will take forever to play their word.
You are most welcome.
Edit: You also mention challenges. I forget exactly but I think you just press the challenge button if you don't think the word is correct and the system will varify it. The word database is taken from Dictionary.com. Although I have seen it mess up a few times and add words it should not allow, proper names and such.
[ July 15, 2004, 16:25: Message edited by: Ragnarok ]
__________________
Ragnarok - Hevordian Story Thread
-------------------
I think...therefore I am confused.
They were armed. With guns, said Omari.
Canadians. With guns. And a warship. What is this world coming to?
The dreaded derelict dwelling two ton devil bunny!
Every ship can be a minesweeper... Once
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July 15th, 2004, 06:22 PM
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Rags, I was commenting more on how challenging a word could be a possible weak spot in the game with people logged into dictionary.com typing in the word before they clicked the challenge button (or something similar). After finding out how people had card-counting routines running beside their Hearts game...well...I quit playing.
__________________
ALLIANCE, n. In international politics, the union of two thieves who have their hands so deeply inserted in each other's pocket that they cannot separately plunder a third. (Ambrose Bierce)
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July 15th, 2004, 07:20 PM
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
If you did want to cheat, who is to prevent you from using a program finding words for you? The computer Version of Scrabble comes with such helps, so you could probably use it in the Online Version (if you have nothing better to do).
Of course, it mostly applies to playing with random people on the net; I guess that we can trust one another on this forum for example.
Slightly less on topic, add ancient Greek to your list Randallw and I think you have all the roots of English words. While they aren't too many actual Greek words that I can think of ("phenomenon" and its plural form "phenomena" would be one, like "psyche" and a few other not so common words), Greek words are commonly used to make compound nouns (such as, say, "biology", the study of life). But it isn't so particular to English alone, and I am digressing even more.
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August 17th, 2004, 09:47 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Quote:
Ragnarok said:
Quote:
Originally posted by Slynky:
Scrabble player?! Kewl! Can't find anyone who can handle me in my circle of friends. Be nice if there was an Online place to play Scrabble and have some fun!
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There is. Right here. It is Yahoo Literati. It is scrabble just without the scrabble name. My mom used to play all the time. It is alot of fun.
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Here is a Online scrabble site mentioned on slashdot today...
Scrabble!
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August 18th, 2004, 05:45 AM
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
Perhaps a nice word such as Hymeneal would work? It means "Pertaining to a wedding or a marriage", and comes in straight line from Greek. I cannot think of a word on this root that would mean "wedding" though.
In case it doesn't qualify (and I have a hunch it won't), I will settle for a nice "to mesmerise":
1: To spellbind; enthrall
2: To induce hypnosis in.
Voilà!
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August 18th, 2004, 10:07 PM
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Lieutenant General
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Re: OT- Word of the day.
incorrigible
adjective
1. Incapable of being corrected or reformed: an incorrigible criminal.
2. Firmly rooted; ineradicable: incorrigible faults.
3. Difficult or impossible to control or manage: an incorrigible, spoiled child.
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