ramrod

Dec. 29th, 2025 09:13 am
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[personal profile] prettygoodword
ramrod (RAM-rod) - n., a rod for ramming home the charge in a muzzle-loading firearm; a ranch or trail foreman, responsible for getting the work done; a demanding overseer, a disciplinarian. v., to force with or as with a ramrod. adj., marked by rigidity, severity, or stiffness.


That last includes the colorful idiom of ramrodding a bill through the legislature, which produces an interesting image when you apply the original context. The original ramrods were, indeed, rods, thus the name.

---L.

Update

Dec. 29th, 2025 10:27 am
matt_zimmer: (Gilda And Meek And The Un-Iverse)
[personal profile] matt_zimmer
Life Update:

Currently a mess. It would be weird if I wasn't. I've been doing everything to distract myself right now.

Un-Iverse Update:

And so 18 pages tonight. GOOD pages, for a total of 83. I estimate there are between 12-15 pages left. One more session of drawing and several sessions of editing, it's done. Right NOW, the plan is for me to finish it this week and put it up on the site on Sunday Afternoon. Although it could potentially be postponed a week to the following Sunday.

If you are worried about me killing myself over this while I'm grieving both my parents, that's why I'm doing it. The issue is dedicated to them both, and I both want it to be amazing, and put that dedication with their names on it online as soon as possible. It's not just for me, it's not just for my readers. It's me working hard to honor them.

It's a good issue too, which is nice. I would hate to have dedicated a clunker to my parents. That being said, me and my readers have very different definitions of clunkers anyways. Issues I've done I love, my readers love. Issues I've done that underwhelm me... My readers still love. Believe it not, I get it. There's is nothing else like The Un-Iverse out there and even outings that I consider only so-so are entirely unlike everything else. What I will clarify is that I like this issue VERY much.

Stay tuned.

Pass It On 6

Dec. 29th, 2025 09:55 am
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[personal profile] innitmarvelous_og posting in [community profile] iconthat


LINK: https://i.imgur.com/tXPkvQB.jpg

Next: The Avengers (2012)
Tony&BruceBannerAV1-1

Icon Drop September and October

Dec. 29th, 2025 02:35 pm
tinny: Close-up of Wu Lei with long Dongji hair, his head propped up on his hand, looking so soft (wulei_so soft)
[personal profile] tinny
OMG I was so sure I had already posted this - I assembled it in November. /o\ All the icons I made for challenge communities in September and October:



63 icons - about half of Wu-Lei-related things )

Concrit welcome! Comments adored! Credit appreciated! Take and use as many icons as you like. If you want to know whose textures and brushes I use, take a look at my resource post.

Previous icon posts:

dolorosa_12: (seedlings)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
Today's prompt from [personal profile] chestnut_pod brings this year's December talking meme to a close, and it's been a great run of questions. Many thanks to all of you who left a prompt! This final prompt is to talk about how I learnt to garden, plus any longstanding plant friends in my garden.

Response here )

[community profile] fandomtrees is due to open for reveals on 10 January, but it will only do so when every participant has a minimum of two gifts each. This post on the comm links to a spreadsheet of needy trees — there are still a substantial number of participants with only one gift, or with no gift at all. My own tree is here.

And the new year means that [community profile] snowflake_challenge will be rolling around again. I'm always so happy to see the consequent burst of enthusiastic activity on Dreamwidth!

Snowflake Challenge: A flatlay of a snowflake shaped shortbread cake, a mug with coffee, and a string of holiday lights on top of a rustic napkin.

Monday Word: Maquette

Dec. 29th, 2025 06:57 am
stonepicnicking_okapi: letters (letters)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi posting in [community profile] 1word1day
maquette [ma-ket, muh-]

noun
a small model or study in three dimensions for either a sculptural or an architectural project.

examples
1. we make midnight a maquette of the year: "on new year's eve" by Evie Shockley
2. This hand-painted cold-cast porcelain maquette of Owlman is based on art from the highly anticipated Warner Home Video made-for-DVD animated original movie, Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths! DC Comics for February 2010 | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009

origin
1900–05; < French < Italian macchietta, diminutive of macchia a sketch, complex of lines < Latin macula mesh, spot

Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's maquette for the fountain he donated to Valenciennes
maquette

Lingering Challenge

Dec. 29th, 2025 06:46 am
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[personal profile] kalloway posting in [community profile] readingtogether
Well, this is far later than intended because someone unfortunately gifted me with a miserable headcold for Christmas and I've mostly been laying around watching youtube...

But all is not lost - it is only Monday and we are still firmly in the weird week of the year.

What's lingering?

We all have that book. The one we'll get to later. The one that doesn't get chosen. The one that's well-intentioned. (It's been sitting there for a long time.)

While it doesn't have to be the absolute oldest thing on your TBR shelf, if you even know what is, this is the week to read* something that's been waiting for awhile.

I'll try for a follow-up around the 5th. Nudge me if I've been buried under bookpiles.


*read/listen/watch/play. Whatever media you choose is fine.
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[personal profile] magnavox_23 posting in [community profile] icons
40 Our Flag Means Death icons from 2x05 Curse of the Seafaring Life

  

Check the rest out here. <3  
magnavox_23: Ed sits in profile, futzing with a fishing line against a pale background (OFMD_Ed_fishing)
[personal profile] magnavox_23 posting in [community profile] fandom_icons
40 Our Flag Means Death icons from 2x05 Curse of the Seafaring Life

  

Check the rest out here. <3  

#176 - Verboten

Dec. 29th, 2025 05:21 am
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[personal profile] mxcatmoon posting in [community profile] vocab_drabbles
This week's word is

Verboten


[fərˈbōtn, vəˈbəo͝ot(ə)n, feɐˈboːtn]


adjective
Forbidden, especially by an authority:

"There are indeed no words if the only appropriate ones are verboten."


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Check the rest out here. <3 
[syndicated profile] openculture_feed

Posted by Colin Marshall

It’s easy to imagine the myriad difficulties with which you’d be faced if you were suddenly transported a millennium back in time. But if you’re a native (or even proficient) English speaker in an English-speaking part of the world, the language, at least, surely wouldn’t be a problem. Or so you’d think, until your first encounter with utterances like “þat troe is daed on gaerde” or “þa rokes forleten urne tun.” Both of those sentences appear in the new video above from Simon Roper, in which he delivers a monologue beginning in the English of the fifth century and ending in the English of the end of the last millennium.

An Englishman specializing in videos about linguistics and anthropology, Roper has pulled off this sort of feat before: we previously featured him here on Open Culture for his performance of a London accent as it evolved through 660 years.

But writing and delivering a monologue that works its way through a millennium and a half of change in the English language is obviously a thornier endeavor, not least because it involves literal thorns — the þ characters, that is, used in the Old English Latin alphabet. They’re pronounced like th, which you can hear when Roper speaks the sentences quoted earlier, which translate to “The tree is dead in the yard” and “The rooks abandoned our town.”

The word translate should give us pause, since we’re only talking about English. But then, English has undergone such a dramatic evolution that, at far enough of a remove, we might as well be talking about different languages. What Roper emphasizes is that the changes didn’t happen suddenly. Non-Scandinavian listeners may lack even an inkling that his farmer of the year 450 is talking about sheep and pigs with the words skēpu and swīnu, but his final lines, in which he speaks of possessing “all the hot coffee I need” and “friends I didn’t have in New York” in the year 2000, will pose no difficulty to Anglophones anywhere in the world. Even his list of agricultural wealth around the early thirteenth century — “We habben an god hus, we habben mani felds” — could make you believe that a trip 600 years in the past would be, as they said in Middle English, no trouble.

Related Content:

Tracing English Back to Its Oldest Known Ancestor: An Introduction to Proto-Indo-European

Hear the Evolution of the London Accent Over 660 Years: From 1346 to 2006

What Shakespeare’s English Sounded Like, and How We Know It

Where Did the English Language Come From?: An Animated Introduction

A Brief Tour of British & Irish Accents: 14 Ways to Speak English in 84 Seconds

The Entire History of English in 22 Minutes

Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletter Books on Cities and the book The Stateless City: a Walk through 21st-Century Los Angeles. Follow him on the social network formerly known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.

[syndicated profile] openculture_feed

Posted by OC

The inner critic creates writer’s block and stifles adventurous writing, hems it in with safe clichés and overthinking. Every writer has to find his or her own way to get free of that sourpuss rationalist who insists on strangling each thought with logical analysis and fitting each idea into an oppressive predetermined scheme or ideology. William S. Burroughs, one of the most adventurous writers to emerge from the mid-20th century, famously employed what he called the cut-up method.

Developed by Burroughs and painter Brion Gysin, this literary take on the collage technique used by avant-garde artists like Georges Braque originated with Surrealist Tristan Tzara, who “proposed to create a poem on the spot by pulling words out of a hat.” The suggestion was so provocative, Burroughs claims in his essay “The Cut-Up Method,” that cut-ups were thereafter “grounded… on the Freudian couch.”

Since Burroughs and Gysin’s literary redeployment of the method in 1959, it has proved useful not only for poets and novelists, but for songwriters like David Bowie and Kurt Cobain. And any frustrated novelist, poet, or songwriter may use it to shake off the habitual thought patterns that cage creativity or choke it off entirely. How so?

Well, it’s best at this point to defer to the authority, Burroughs himself, who explains the cut-up technique thus:

The method is simple. Here is one way to do it. Take a page. Like this page. Now cut down the middle and cross the middle. You have four sections: 1 2 3 4 … one two three four. Now rearrange the sections placing section four with section one and section two with section three. And you have a new page. Sometimes it says much the same thing. Sometimes something quite different–(cutting up political speeches is an interesting exercise)–in any case you will find that it says something and something quite definite. Take any poet or writer you fancy. Heresay, or poems you have read over many times. The words have lost meaning and life through years of repetition. Now take the poem and type out selected passages. Fill a page with excerpts. Now cut the page. You have a new poem. As many poems as you like.

Burroughs gives us “one way” to do it. There may be infinite others, and it’s up to you to find what works. I myself have pushed through a creative funk by making montages from scraps of ancient poetry and phrases of modern pop, clichés ripped from the headlines and esoteric quotes from obscure religious texts—pieced together more or less at random, then edited to fit the form of a song, poem, or whatever. Virtual cut-and-paste makes scissors unnecessary, but the physical act may precipitate epiphanies. “Images shift sense under the scissors,” Burroughs writes; then he hints at a synesthesia experience: “smell images to sound sight to sound sound to kinesthetic.”

Who is this method for? Everyone, Burroughs asserts. “Cuts ups are for everyone,” just as Tzara remarked that “poetry is for everyone.” No need to have established some experimental art world bona fides, or even call oneself an artist at all; the method is “experimental in the sense of being something to do.” In the short video at the top, you can hear Burroughs explain the technique further, adding his occult spin on things by noting that many cut-ups “seem to refer to future events.” On that account, we may suspend belief.

As Jennie Skerl notes in her essay on Burroughs, cut-up theory “parallels avant-garde literary theory” like Jacques Derrida’s Deconstruction. “All writing is in fact cut ups,” writes Burroughs, meaning not that all writing is pieced together with scissors and glue, but that it’s all “a collage of words read heard overheard.” This theory should liberate us from onerous notions of originality and authenticity, tied to ideas of the author as a sui generis, all-knowing god and the text as an expression of cosmically ordered meaning. (Another surrealist writing method, the game of Exquisite Corpse, makes the point literal.) All that metaphysical baggage weighs us down. Everything’s been done—both well and badly—before, Burroughs writes. Follow his methods and his insistent creative maxim and you cannot make a mistake—“Assume that the worst has happened,” he writes, “and act accordingly.”

Note: An earlier version of this post appeared on our site in 2016.

Related Content:

How David Bowie, Kurt Cobain & Thom Yorke Write Songs With William Burroughs’ Cut-Up Technique

The “Priest” They Called Him: A Dark Collaboration Between Kurt Cobain & William S. Burroughs

How William S. Burroughs Used the Cut-Up Technique to Shut Down London’s First Espresso Bar (1972)

What Happens When the Books in William S. Burroughs’ Personal Library Get Artistically Arranged — with His Own “Cut-Up” Method

How Jim Jarmusch Gets Creative Ideas from William S. Burroughs’ Cut-Up Method and Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies

Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. 

tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/198: Snake-Eater — T Kingfisher
Walter would . . . Her thoughts stopped there, because Walter would already have dropped dead of shock weeks ago. She was in a world where Walter no longer applied. [loc. 3355]

Selena is down on her luck when she heads, with her beloved dog Copper, to the remote desert town of Quartz Creek. She has $27 to her name, and has left behind a job in a deli and a gaslighting ex who's destroyed Selena's self-confidence. Read more... )

Best Of is back!

Dec. 29th, 2025 10:55 am
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[personal profile] tinny

[community profile] bestof_icons is back! \o/

I'd be very happy if you helped me choose icons to remake!


ICON REMAKE - JOIN IN! | MY THREAD

Cover Snark: Brooch Toots

Dec. 29th, 2025 09:00 am
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

Welcome back to Cover Snark!

Ruthless by Kate Rudolph. A man and woman embracing behind a scifi ship but in front of a planet. She is a brunette with wavy hair and in a black tank top. He has golden scaly skin with leopard spots and glowing red eyes. His hair is dark and in a thick pompadour.

Sarah: Pam G has sent us two!

PamG: Oh baby, looks like a mystery skin condition in an Elvis wig to me. All I can see is grandma’s animal print spandex. Also, those eyes! We used to get that a lot when photographing the doggos. And, and WHY are their nether regions fading into an alien cityscape.

Elyse: Sir, you’re gonna need an ointment for that.

Sarah: So the guy with the Geordie eye headband in the X Men movie has some dermatologic challenges ahead? We’ve had alien nanny, alien daycare…is this Alien Dermatologist?

Amanda: There’s another cover edition and it’s just the dude. His spots were squares and diamonds.

A Ruthless Bargain by Zadie Fox. A blue scaled man is pulling a woman's head back a disturbing angle.

PamG: when I searched for the cover image, I got a bonus. And lizard boy is not romantic. No no, Lizard Boy, her head does not unscrew

Sarah: I honestly thought the blue Goyard print one was hugging a rock. Cradling a meteor. Snuggling some geology. ALL OF THAT makes more sense than whatever is happening here.

Elyse: This Tik Tok chiropractor videos are going to too far.

Dragon's Virgin Mate by Alicia Banks. A nude man is standing in fire. The flames are artfully obscuring his junk. He has wings, but they look small and they belong on a stone gargoyle.

From MegCat: Somebody needs to tell him that urine is not a good way to put out a fire.

Sarah: Another crotchfire or the same crotchfire?

Amanda: He is most certainly naked.

Sarah: He looks like he smelled something very, very bad. I suspect a surprise when the fire is out- if he has enough dragon pee to extinguish it.

Queens and Monsters by India Amare. A shirtless, headless man is wearing only a red cloth wrapped around his waist. A full moon hangs in the sky. He has a very strong grip on a hilt, like vein poppingly strong. A dragon shaped brooch or emblem is suspending in the air behind his butt.

From Kim: What is that weird bulge on the side of his stomach? Maybe positioning, but I can’t look away from it. And why does it look almost like it has a beak? Maybe it’s just my phone.

Sarah: I think this person, who might be a queen or might be a monster, or both – why limit yourself? – should have that looked at right now. Like, put the sword down and go to urgent care.

Amanda: Is that a brooch shooting out of his butt? A butt brooch?

Sarah: Who toots the brooch?

conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
ask a detailed question about phonology, such as "Do you really pronounce 'tr' as 'chr'?" (Yes, yes we do. We all do. It's almost impossible not to due to the physiology of those phonemes.)

And this will generate a burst of absolutely, frustratingly useless nonsense, because people just do not know how they talk. They don't know how they talk, they can't analyze their phonetics on the fly, and they are staggeringly unaware of these facts.

I keep telling these people to go to /r/linguistics instead, but thus far, nobody has taken my advice. Which is a pity, because I do give excellent advice, especially in this case.

But seriously - nobody knows how they talk. It's like trying to explain the biomechanics of walking. Sure, you've been doing it since you were a toddler (probably?), but that doesn't mean you have any understanding at all of what the hell you're doing as you propel yourself from place to place. I bet you can't even explain how you adjust for your varying center of balance!

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