1. Audie says:

    Most of the machinery of modern language is labour-saving machinery; and it saves mental labour very much more than it ought. Scientific phrases are used like scientific wheels and piston-rods to make swifter and smoother yet the path of the comfortable. Long words go rattling by us like long railway trains. We know they are carrying thousands who are too tired or too indolent to walk and think for themselves. It is a good exercise to try for once in a way to express any opinion one holds in words of one syllable. If you say “The social utility of the indeterminate sentence is recognized by all criminologists as a part of our sociological evolution towards a more humane and scientific view of punishment,” you can go on talking like that for hours with hardly a movement of the gray matter inside your skull. But if you begin “I wish Jones to go to gaol and Brown to say when Jones shall come out,” you will discover, with a thrill of horror, that you are obliged to think. The long words are not the hard words, it is the short words that are hard. There is much more metaphysical subtlety in the word “damn” than in the word “degeneration.”

    Chesterton, G. K. (Gilbert Keith). Orthodoxy (p. 117).

  2. notleia says:

    I’ve seen a form of “avulse” in medical terminology: “avulsion” as in nail avulsion (mental screaming, because there were usually pictures) or even digit avulsion (slightly louder mental screaming).

  3. The color swatch for “oxblood,” by seeming coincidence, looks almost identical to the redesigned SpecFaith navigation bar (as of this past summer).

What do you think?