Wiktionary:Requested entries (English)/2021

A

 * - a cantor of the Orisha faith originating with the Yoruba people of Nigeria
 * absolute veto - used in a political context in some countries
 * amygdala hijack
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.
 * from ab- + oralization, "hyperdevelopment of stolon tissue at the expense of head structures" in colonial marine organisms. To be contrasted with oralization, which is the reverse.

B

 * [new sense]; also : "a margin of land within the tide mark of floods or of the spring tides.", . Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 09:51, 23 March 2021 (UTC)
 * breakway, as used in this article about Australia: : "sunset on the breakways"
 * (US military slang)
 * — See PseudoSkull (talk) 06:02, 8 November 2021 (UTC)
 * / [new sense]; specifically in the noun and possible verb senses relating to valves
 * — See PseudoSkull (talk) 06:02, 8 November 2021 (UTC)
 * / [new sense]; specifically in the noun and possible verb senses relating to valves
 * / [new sense]; specifically in the noun and possible verb senses relating to valves
 * / [new sense]; specifically in the noun and possible verb senses relating to valves
 * / [new sense]; specifically in the noun and possible verb senses relating to valves

C

 * - a place name
 * chapri, chhapri: (India) member of a teenage subculture associated with trendy clothing, "gangsta" behaviour, social media activity etc.?
 * clear run: (primarily British English?) (Sum of parts?) Sports term used in politics, unopposed.
 * color: additional sense, used as in "can you give some color on this?" being a request for information or details (but with connotations I'm not certain about.)
 * This is the figurative sense, currently 7, "richness of expression", as used in color commentator. Vox Sciurorum (talk) 12:53, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
 * crepusculæ - "Griggs dragged open the parched door, and wound his way up and up [the tower stairs] through the spiders and other crepusculæ." Short story, "The Wine-dark Sea", by Robert Aickman. (probably a misapprehension of both the declension and meaning of /, so probably not worth any entry)
 * - see plural "cleekers", in, , ; note that we have cleek, whose sense "a large hook" seems to be related, per . Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:23, 6 February 2021 (UTC)
 * Started Citations:cleeker.
 * - new sense as above, and see, . Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:23, 6 February 2021 (UTC)
 * / (and "cooried" [E.G: Stella cooried in between his arm and chest.]
 * - see Continental System - Sarilho1 (talk) 10:27, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
 * - same as above - Sarilho1 (talk) 10:27, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
 * - in stock and crypto trading ―Rex Aurōrum｢Disputātiō｣ 06:11, 22 February 2021 (UTC) - noun - synonym of "stop loss"? Facts707 (talk) 18:06, 10 June 2021 (UTC)
 * (note also the capitalized version in Latter-day Saint theology)
 * 1) * 1826,, , volume 2, chapter 19
 * She flitted through the rooms, like a good spirit, dispatched from the celestial kingdom, to illumine our dark hour with alien splendor.
 * at me (or "cut [his|her|their] eyes") Discussed in [1]: "which the Collins dictionary says originates in the Caribbean and means to look rudely at a person and then turn away sharply while closing one's eyes dismissively.". Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 10:54, 3 October 2021 (UTC)
 * See Citations:cytea
 * at me (or "cut [his|her|their] eyes") Discussed in [1]: "which the Collins dictionary says originates in the Caribbean and means to look rudely at a person and then turn away sharply while closing one's eyes dismissively.". Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 10:54, 3 October 2021 (UTC)
 * See Citations:cytea
 * See Citations:cytea

D

 * drag kid
 * in modern common usage but not sum of parts. (Urban Dict says "act of firing your weapon into the air while sitting down at your desk")
 * / : the date something is released, especially in media, eg an album or movie -- note we do have drop sense 27, "to enter public distribution"
 * : something to do with political dependency: a supporter of? a critic of?
 * to, - seems to be a new word circulating with a few thousand Google hits and an UB entry. Looks like an illiterate antonym for concentrate(d) but seems to be defined as being similar to distracted but less jolting...
 * and - from pole dancing
 * dry barrel and wet barrel hydrants
 * dragglement - (noun: an impoverished person?) "This is Henry sneering at the town and its dregs and dragglements, as he did at New York in his letters and his journals, not, I should say, Thoreau sneering at democracy." Henry Seidel Canby, Walt Whitman: An American (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1943, p. 154).
 * also
 * also
 * also
 * also
 * also
 * "The Grand Junction Railway Companion to Liverpool, Manchester, and Birmingham" uses the first four of the above, including both hyphenated and unhyphenated forms of the first. Google Books and IA each have them in other works, also, including in parliamentary records, as well as "disrectory". "dis-curacy" is included by extrapolation. Update: Apparently an abbreviation for "Discharged vicarage" (etc.), meaning "[a parish] discharged from the payment of first fruits". Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 19:18, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
 * duckbill mask
 * - cognitive impairment/dysfunction?
 * Started Citations:dysnoesia
 * - cognitive impairment/dysfunction?
 * Started Citations:dysnoesia
 * - cognitive impairment/dysfunction?
 * Started Citations:dysnoesia
 * - cognitive impairment/dysfunction?
 * Started Citations:dysnoesia

E

 * enfibered 19th century English word, perhaps intertwined?
 * epithetism (translation of the French épithétisme, a term coined by the French grammarian Pierre Fontanier to designate a figure of style that imitates an epithet, that is, a collection of words that serve the same function as a single-word epithet)
 * erbumine (synonym of tert-butylamine in the context of pharmacology. Example: perindopril erbumine)
 * etymonym (synonym of paronym). Not sure if it's citeable and may be a calque of Russian. Thadh (talk) 08:27, 15 April 2021 (UTC)
 * - a former genus name for Rubus, now possibly a subgenus, but not found at  or  or Wikispecies or  or . No shortage of hits on GoogleBooks or Google Scholar though, so it might merit an entry.
 * – (botany) a particular developmental step in building xylem? Found in the "web2" word list and in Wikipedia article about xylem. Also red-linked from end-.
 * earsaver, ear saver
 * erythrophleum - the entries for this in both en:Wikipedia and Wikispecies
 * erythrophleum - the entries for this in both en:Wikipedia and Wikispecies
 * erythrophleum - the entries for this in both en:Wikipedia and Wikispecies
 * erythrophleum - the entries for this in both en:Wikipedia and Wikispecies

F

 * ‘feel no way’ is a Jamaican expression meaning ‘couldn’t care less’. Perhaps this could be addressed at way, we could add a new sense: ‘feeling’.
 * - from pole dancing
 * FICINT
 * Started Citations:FICINT. Most uses are recent and from August Cole (who coined the term), some coauthored with Peter W. Singer. I did find three that are sort of independent, although still referencing his work. Not sure if this passes; perhaps we should wait a bit.
 * - a system of musical notation
 * - to think or believe (?); used as "Most noble sirs, I feggs, Ye are the biggest wooden-heads " in and "I'feggs, I'll be in fashion, that I will!" in this page.  Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 19:10, 4 September 2021 (UTC)
 * This is an interesting one. But the transcription of the first example is wrong: if you look at the scan, you can see that it's actually i’ feggs. So the i can't be the word I. The second example is I’feggs, but this is at the start of a sentence, so it's consistent with the basic form being i’feggs. I found a third example of the term (download the "colour composite text file" to see the scan). In this case it's actually printed as I feggs (and not at the start of a sentence), but I suspect this is an error, similar to the way that iwis was often erroneously printed as I wis. (In fact, i’feggs seems to have been used in exactly the same way as iwis, and with exactly the same meaning. I can't decide if this is just a weird coincidence, or if i’feggs could possibly be a mutant form of iwis.) --Zundark (talk) 09:35, 11 September 2021 (UTC)
 * I had a look in my old Chambers dictionary, and found the interjection fegs, with the definition “in faith, truly”. So that is very likely what this feggs is, just spelt differently. The i’ is presumably for in (even if that doesn’t quite seem to make sense). --Zundark (talk) 12:44, 12 September 2021 (UTC)
 * And see also the entry for fegs in Wright (Vol.II, p325). It's a long entry, so I won't quote it here, but it mentions that feggs is a spelling used in Scotland, and it also mentions the expression i’ fegs. --Zundark (talk) 14:57, 13 September 2021 (UTC)
 * I had a look in my old Chambers dictionary, and found the interjection fegs, with the definition “in faith, truly”. So that is very likely what this feggs is, just spelt differently. The i’ is presumably for in (even if that doesn’t quite seem to make sense). --Zundark (talk) 12:44, 12 September 2021 (UTC)
 * And see also the entry for fegs in Wright (Vol.II, p325). It's a long entry, so I won't quote it here, but it mentions that feggs is a spelling used in Scotland, and it also mentions the expression i’ fegs. --Zundark (talk) 14:57, 13 September 2021 (UTC)


 * : some kind of door lock, possibly/sometimes used for childproofing
 * - This verb is used once in Watership Down (near the end of chapter 18): “But they saw nothing except a field-mouse, which came out of its hole and began furricking in a patch of seeded grasses.” It appears to be a dialect variant of forage (but it’s unlikely to be an exact synonym of forage, as that word is used a number of times elsewhere in the novel). Someone asked about this on wordreference.com, and a reply said that furrick is a Kentish word.
 * In R:Wright volume 2 page 522 as a Kentish word for . Vox Sciurorum (talk) 13:11, 12 September 2021 (UTC)
 * Thanks. I wasn't aware of Wright - looks pretty useful. Wright cites A Dictionary of the Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms in Use in the County of Kent, which gives a longer definition (on page 60, under furrige, which it considers furrick to be the same as): "To forage; to hunt about and rummage, and put everything into disorder whilst looking for something." --Zundark (talk) 14:42, 12 September 2021 (UTC)
 * See also "fossick". Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 18:15, 19 October 2021 (UTC)
 * fir as a verb: Blake: "Phoebus fir'd my vocal rage"
 * The verb here is not fir, but fire. The e of fired is replaced by an apostrophe to indicate that the word is pronounced as a single syllable. If the verb were fir, it would be written firred or firr’d rather than fir’d. --Zundark (talk) 07:45, 18 September 2021 (UTC)
 * – used to refer to the 2021 Maricopa County presidential ballot audit and other similar ventures
 * – in MW, Penguin -- more often Flit gun; see WP; brand name?
 * enwiki notes it "became a generic name" and the dictionaries don't capitalize it.
 * – in MW, Penguin -- more often Flit gun; see WP; brand name?
 * enwiki notes it "became a generic name" and the dictionaries don't capitalize it.
 * enwiki notes it "became a generic name" and the dictionaries don't capitalize it.

G

 * (or ) - see, . Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 12:29, 16 January 2021 (UTC)
 * guard*: MISSING noun and verb in bridge (and other trick-taking card games?): you can guard a suit, or you can hold a card that is a guard. WP says "a holding that prevents an opponent from taking a trick or tricks". Equinox ◑ 01:48, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
 * see the definition on SNPedia
 * ghost picture
 * govware – or sometimes GovWare. noun, portmanteau of "goverment spyware". Coined in German first? link, link, link, link.
 * - an alloy of copper, gold, and silver
 * , — from a 19th-c account, "toes so gaulded that our stockings were wet with blood"
 * , - an exclamation of exasperation? see good night phrase #2 (incredulity)
 * - an alloy of copper, gold, and silver
 * , — from a 19th-c account, "toes so gaulded that our stockings were wet with blood"
 * , - an exclamation of exasperation? see good night phrase #2 (incredulity)
 * , - an exclamation of exasperation? see good night phrase #2 (incredulity)
 * , - an exclamation of exasperation? see good night phrase #2 (incredulity)
 * , - an exclamation of exasperation? see good night phrase #2 (incredulity)

H

 * - metaphor for sexual intercourse
 * hydronephroureter - "... describes the dilation of the entire upper urinary tract (both the renal pelvicalyceal system and the ureter)."
 * - a synonym for boric acid
 * - Meaning “Good for the heart” which first appeared in the 1913 Webster Dictionary. -- Are you sure? Why would a word first appear in a dictionary? Equinox ◑ 20:39, 19 August 2021 (UTC)
 * /hey-mister, verb: to beg, especially to ask someone older to act as an intermediary when purchasing a good that has a minimum age requirement (usually alcoholic beverages or tobacco)
 * Created Citations:hey mister
 * - referring to intercourse. This could be SOP, but it seems like a potential set phrase and has a lot of uses . Included in an idiom dictionary (many of whose other entries are included on Wiktionary)
 * /hey-mister, verb: to beg, especially to ask someone older to act as an intermediary when purchasing a good that has a minimum age requirement (usually alcoholic beverages or tobacco)
 * Created Citations:hey mister
 * - referring to intercourse. This could be SOP, but it seems like a potential set phrase and has a lot of uses . Included in an idiom dictionary (many of whose other entries are included on Wiktionary)
 * /hey-mister, verb: to beg, especially to ask someone older to act as an intermediary when purchasing a good that has a minimum age requirement (usually alcoholic beverages or tobacco)
 * Created Citations:hey mister
 * - referring to intercourse. This could be SOP, but it seems like a potential set phrase and has a lot of uses . Included in an idiom dictionary (many of whose other entries are included on Wiktionary)
 * /hey-mister, verb: to beg, especially to ask someone older to act as an intermediary when purchasing a good that has a minimum age requirement (usually alcoholic beverages or tobacco)
 * Created Citations:hey mister
 * - referring to intercourse. This could be SOP, but it seems like a potential set phrase and has a lot of uses . Included in an idiom dictionary (many of whose other entries are included on Wiktionary)
 * /hey-mister, verb: to beg, especially to ask someone older to act as an intermediary when purchasing a good that has a minimum age requirement (usually alcoholic beverages or tobacco)
 * Created Citations:hey mister
 * - referring to intercourse. This could be SOP, but it seems like a potential set phrase and has a lot of uses . Included in an idiom dictionary (many of whose other entries are included on Wiktionary)
 * /hey-mister, verb: to beg, especially to ask someone older to act as an intermediary when purchasing a good that has a minimum age requirement (usually alcoholic beverages or tobacco)
 * Created Citations:hey mister
 * - referring to intercourse. This could be SOP, but it seems like a potential set phrase and has a lot of uses . Included in an idiom dictionary (many of whose other entries are included on Wiktionary)

I

 * - verb, archaic https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/immatriculate
 * - noun, archaic? - wikt in French only - https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/immatriculation
 * Indian pony per: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Indian%20pony
 * - Abbreviation of "in excess". -- Really in everyday English? I thought it was just a band name. - there are many Google hits for ‘INXS of’ and ‘in XS of’, so we could probably also do with an entry for XS too. I think I’ll create an entry for INXS and a new sense of XS(meaning ‘excess’,) too.
 * icculus Afnordly (talk) 07:01, 17 June 2021 (UTC)
 * infocide – "Disengaging from the Internet via the deletion of all your publicly available information."
 * – I only know it in the phrase but probably it stands on its own as well
 * interdeterminacy or interdeterminancy? --Frigoris (talk) 12:47, 5 October 2021 (UTC)
 * , : apparently from Robocop? and/or associated with 1950s sci-fi story "The Marching Morons"

K

 * , a combination of kaboom + bloom, used as a pun relating to flowers or plants
 * karakoa, kora-kora (kora kora): both Austronesian ships. Karakoas are Filipino outrigger ships; the name is either a corruption of Arabic قرقور, Spanish carraca, or from "ancient" Tagalog. Kora-koras are from the Maluku Islands / Moluccas and have a similarly unclear etymology. RBolton123 (talk) 08:32, 28 August 2021 (UTC)
 * with regard to early German stamps. May have a broader meaning for other documents.
 * Terms from 's kinesics: allokine, kine*, kinemorph, parakinesic, parakinesics
 * - as per at Wikipedia
 * Created Citations:keyhole fly.
 * kick there is a sense I've seen for a glue (cyanoacrylate glue in particular) setting that I don't see in the kick entry
 * Belonging to the extinct family Kalenteridae (mindat) of molluscs. For etymology of the genus Kalentera, perhaps see "J. Marwick. 1953. Divisions and faunas of the Hokonui System (Triassic and Jurassic). New Zealand Geological Survey Paleontological Bulletin 21" (inaccessible). Random guess, it could mean "beautiful guts" in Greek.
 * Belonging to the extinct family Kalenteridae (mindat) of molluscs. For etymology of the genus Kalentera, perhaps see "J. Marwick. 1953. Divisions and faunas of the Hokonui System (Triassic and Jurassic). New Zealand Geological Survey Paleontological Bulletin 21" (inaccessible). Random guess, it could mean "beautiful guts" in Greek.

L

 * - verb, from British English
 * - abbreviation for linguistics
 * (physics term)
 * - suffix in words like heterologous and homologous
 * lay analysis
 * supposedly diner-slang for to go
 * Probably "The technique of recording moving images of vocal fold vibration using a laryngostroboscope", or something like that, but I'm not sure the attested usages are independent enough. Seems like only a couple of Japanese researchers use it.
 * - poker term
 * Probably "The technique of recording moving images of vocal fold vibration using a laryngostroboscope", or something like that, but I'm not sure the attested usages are independent enough. Seems like only a couple of Japanese researchers use it.
 * - poker term

M

 * (new sense) — "an all-encompassing view"; "a method, technique or system by which a very large object can be observed, for example the Earth and its contents"; see w:Macroscope (science concept) and sources in et seq.  Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:58, 25 August 2021 (UTC)
 * — sth to do with ; see useful article here: Magic Spots Cast a Spell on DNA Primase (Gourse & Keck)
 * - English version of 群體性事件, the Chinese government's euphemism for public protests
 * — A person from Mecca, according to Wikipedia
 * — in spaceflight, and probably elsewhere Roger the Rodger (talk) 21:37, 20 July 2021 (UTC)
 * — spaceless version of the baseball term mop up; not sure if it's common enough to warrant attention, but I saw it in the wild today
 * — a system of musical notation
 * - English version of 群體性事件, the Chinese government's euphemism for public protests
 * — A person from Mecca, according to Wikipedia
 * — in spaceflight, and probably elsewhere Roger the Rodger (talk) 21:37, 20 July 2021 (UTC)
 * — spaceless version of the baseball term mop up; not sure if it's common enough to warrant attention, but I saw it in the wild today
 * — a system of musical notation
 * — in spaceflight, and probably elsewhere Roger the Rodger (talk) 21:37, 20 July 2021 (UTC)
 * — spaceless version of the baseball term mop up; not sure if it's common enough to warrant attention, but I saw it in the wild today
 * — a system of musical notation
 * — in spaceflight, and probably elsewhere Roger the Rodger (talk) 21:37, 20 July 2021 (UTC)
 * — spaceless version of the baseball term mop up; not sure if it's common enough to warrant attention, but I saw it in the wild today
 * — a system of musical notation
 * — in spaceflight, and probably elsewhere Roger the Rodger (talk) 21:37, 20 July 2021 (UTC)
 * — spaceless version of the baseball term mop up; not sure if it's common enough to warrant attention, but I saw it in the wild today
 * — a system of musical notation
 * — spaceless version of the baseball term mop up; not sure if it's common enough to warrant attention, but I saw it in the wild today
 * — a system of musical notation

N

 * (fully)
 * – change made to an online forum post that preempts first response, or that is made within a grace period before the post is marked as "edited", for example three minutes (180 seconds) on Reddit.
 * (fully)
 * – change made to an online forum post that preempts first response, or that is made within a grace period before the post is marked as "edited", for example three minutes (180 seconds) on Reddit.
 * – change made to an online forum post that preempts first response, or that is made within a grace period before the post is marked as "edited", for example three minutes (180 seconds) on Reddit.
 * – change made to an online forum post that preempts first response, or that is made within a grace period before the post is marked as "edited", for example three minutes (180 seconds) on Reddit.
 * – change made to an online forum post that preempts first response, or that is made within a grace period before the post is marked as "edited", for example three minutes (180 seconds) on Reddit.

O

 * I’m sure ‘off’ is sometimes colloquially used to mean ‘offside’. Can we prove this?Overlordnat1 (talk) 12:53, 14 July 2021 (UTC)
 * off year (noun) as in in US politics
 * I’m sure ‘on’ is sometimes colloquially used to mean ‘onside’. Can we prove this? Overlordnat1 (talk) 12:53, 14 July 2021 (UTC)
 * (Australia)
 * (Note: Can only be found in the plural on Google.) Mostly used by one Italian author, V. Scala, and also appears in an article from the 1980s which cites work by Soviet scientists Batrokov, Sadovskaya, Galyashin, Rosynov, Bergel'son, 1978.
 * The work by Scala does not identify any specific lipid as ornitho- as far as I can tell. There is supplementary info with a table containing info on "phospholipids, glycerolipids, ornitholipids, bactophenols" but which is which is left to the reader, it's just a list of abbreviations. The fact that "bactophenols" is a misspelling is not a promising sign.
 * Lipidmaps.org has no results for ornitholipid. This is a site that has entries for things like "dialkylglycosylglycerophospholipids".
 * Okay, typing "ornith" into PubChem and looking at the completions led me to ornithine, which is an amino acid. There is such a thing as an "ornithine lipid". I'm guessing that's what this term refers to.
 * Okay, typing "ornith" into PubChem and looking at the completions led me to ornithine, which is an amino acid. There is such a thing as an "ornithine lipid". I'm guessing that's what this term refers to.

P

 * pepega - slang, means roughly retard, but more politically correct.
 * Twitch emote, hard to find durable uses. But is mentioned in at least 1 GBooks hit.
 * Pershing,, &mdash; a type of (or types of) cinnamon donut pastry
 * I would create these entries myself, but I am not familiar enough with the distinctions/variants discussed on Wikipedia. Nicole Sharp (talk) 10:09, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
 * "cinnamon roll donut" is also a synonym, but might be considered as a sum of parts. However, donuts typically have holes, and these do not, so technically it's not a sum of parts (it's a roll/bun and not a donut).  Nicole Sharp (talk) 10:09, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
 * Also "Persian cinnamon roll" &mdash; not sum of parts, since the cinnamon roll is not Persian ("Persian" derives from "Pershing" instead). Nicole Sharp (talk) 00:48, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
 * - "The traitorous presidentiads of weak Northerners were over." Henry Seidel Canby, Walt Whitman: An American (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1943, p. 211).
 * - see Proxy statement
 * (maths)
 * - maths
 * (archeology) Before the advent of the Mousterian technocomplex.
 * See Citations:premusterian, needs one more.
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * (maths)
 * - maths
 * (archeology) Before the advent of the Mousterian technocomplex.
 * See Citations:premusterian, needs one more.
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * (maths)
 * - maths
 * (archeology) Before the advent of the Mousterian technocomplex.
 * See Citations:premusterian, needs one more.
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * / - in genetics
 * - not sure if this is incorrect vs. an accepted variant, or if that depends on the part of speech. -- Beland (talk) 03:41, 13 November 2021 (UTC)
 * appears in agricultural publications associated with the University of Gent (Netherlands)? —Suzukaze-c (talk) 00:01, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)
 * Possibly a calque of.
 * - derogatory phrase used to refer, broadly, to the LGBT community and its allies, from the practice of including pronouns (e.g. "she/her") in social media profiles WordyAndNerdy (talk) 06:03, 7 December 2021 (UTC)

Q

 * Quettacyonidae (mindat) is an extinct family of mammals found in Pakistan that most sources describe as belonging to the (also extinct) order Arctocyonia; some say Condylarthra. the city Quetta + κύων 'dog'
 * Quettacyonidae (mindat) is an extinct family of mammals found in Pakistan that most sources describe as belonging to the (also extinct) order Arctocyonia; some say Condylarthra. the city Quetta + κύων 'dog'

R

 * - to brag about one's success, accomplishments etc. so as to make another person feel inferior
 * I guess it's just a synonym for relictual. Probably non-standard and/or NNSE. What I can't figure out is why it seems to be used so much by Francophones when the French word is relictuel, not *relictueux. Oh well.
 * - where you also find related terms like single span bridge, v-shaped and batter-post
 * I guess it's just a synonym for relictual. Probably non-standard and/or NNSE. What I can't figure out is why it seems to be used so much by Francophones when the French word is relictuel, not *relictueux. Oh well.
 * - where you also find related terms like single span bridge, v-shaped and batter-post
 * I guess it's just a synonym for relictual. Probably non-standard and/or NNSE. What I can't figure out is why it seems to be used so much by Francophones when the French word is relictuel, not *relictueux. Oh well.
 * - where you also find related terms like single span bridge, v-shaped and batter-post
 * I guess it's just a synonym for relictual. Probably non-standard and/or NNSE. What I can't figure out is why it seems to be used so much by Francophones when the French word is relictuel, not *relictueux. Oh well.
 * - where you also find related terms like single span bridge, v-shaped and batter-post
 * - where you also find related terms like single span bridge, v-shaped and batter-post

S

 * (re evolution): perh only in phrases e.g. constant speedism, variable speedism
 * (compare )
 * - it's a kind of motorcycle but what kind? It's also a term found in road laws as well. -- It means one without a sidecar.
 * sour on - to lose interest or start having a bad opinion about something
 * syncretion
 * scientology (see Talk:Scientology)
 * snitch-tag -- to tag the subject of a social media post in a comment below.
 * - obsolete word #* in Chapman: they make him Stroddle enough, stroot, and look bigg, and gape
 * saharize - (to make like desert dwellers?) "There is a feeling, by this criterion, that too close contact with a culture born of the desert tended (to use Emerson's apt image) to saharize the Persian spirit, which discovered its full expanse of powers only through the medium of its native speech." A.J. Arberry, "Persian Literature," in A.J. Arberry, ed., The Legacy of Persia (Oxford, 1953, p. 207).
 * - a noun derived from  describing describing one's crassness
 * successor science(s): (as far as I can tell) proposed disciplines that would blend traditional science with subjectivity/emotion/etc., proposed by some feminists
 * - may be related to Советская, Soviet, Sovetskaja, Sovetsky (masculine), Sovetskaya (feminine), Sovetskoye (neuter), or Sovetskiye (plural). Russian, Ukrainian, Bosnian, and other Slavic languages. transliteration? phonetic?
 * - a railway siding; see Inland Transit/Stephenson.  Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:20, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
 * . There are two quotes, including
 * There’s a similar 1540 quote mentioned here (https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/cock-a-hoop.html) if that helps. Overlordnat1 (talk) 11:58, 22 July 2021 (UTC)
 * Quote: There's ginger beer, staggerjuice and hot flasks of tea. - Tim Winton, 'Cloudstreet' (novel, 1991, at p.1) = stagger juice
 * - promontory (see https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/cock-a-snook.html) - apparently still existed in 2005 in NE dialect (http://www.indigogroup.co.uk/durhamdialect/ddanews.html)
 * and/or - similar to bandshell - possibly predominantly Australia and New Zealand usage
 * (lb: probabilities)
 * spare capacity
 * , also known as,  --37.11.122.76 01:00, 13 October 2021 (UTC)
 * (or swagger jack or swaggerjack?) (v.), of swagger and hijack, apparently AAVE/"street" slang for: to steal with swagger. Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4. Spiked in usage around 2010 and 2013 (source).
 * - a kind of fish in Trinidad
 * sapaté in Papiamento (not spoken in Trinidad, but close) = shoemaker, from Portuguese sapateiro. Trinidad was colonized by Spain so it could be from zapato/zapatero instead.
 * There seems to be a Trinidadian term "sapatay mud" referring to the accumulation on the soles of one's shoes. The viewable extract at gives sapatay as Chloroscombrus chrysurus, and the different extract of the same book at  implies the term can refer to other members of the family Carangidae as well.
 * or – Israeli political term (see Christian Science Monitor, Uri Gordon p. 352)
 * snitch-tag -- to tag the subject of a social media post in a comment below.
 * - obsolete word #* in Chapman: they make him Stroddle enough, stroot, and look bigg, and gape
 * saharize - (to make like desert dwellers?) "There is a feeling, by this criterion, that too close contact with a culture born of the desert tended (to use Emerson's apt image) to saharize the Persian spirit, which discovered its full expanse of powers only through the medium of its native speech." A.J. Arberry, "Persian Literature," in A.J. Arberry, ed., The Legacy of Persia (Oxford, 1953, p. 207).
 * - a noun derived from  describing describing one's crassness
 * successor science(s): (as far as I can tell) proposed disciplines that would blend traditional science with subjectivity/emotion/etc., proposed by some feminists
 * - may be related to Советская, Soviet, Sovetskaja, Sovetsky (masculine), Sovetskaya (feminine), Sovetskoye (neuter), or Sovetskiye (plural). Russian, Ukrainian, Bosnian, and other Slavic languages. transliteration? phonetic?
 * - a railway siding; see Inland Transit/Stephenson.  Andy Mabbett ( Pigsonthewing ); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:20, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
 * . There are two quotes, including
 * There’s a similar 1540 quote mentioned here (https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/cock-a-hoop.html) if that helps. Overlordnat1 (talk) 11:58, 22 July 2021 (UTC)
 * Quote: There's ginger beer, staggerjuice and hot flasks of tea. - Tim Winton, 'Cloudstreet' (novel, 1991, at p.1) = stagger juice
 * - promontory (see https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/cock-a-snook.html) - apparently still existed in 2005 in NE dialect (http://www.indigogroup.co.uk/durhamdialect/ddanews.html)
 * and/or - similar to bandshell - possibly predominantly Australia and New Zealand usage
 * (lb: probabilities)
 * spare capacity
 * , also known as,  --37.11.122.76 01:00, 13 October 2021 (UTC)
 * (or swagger jack or swaggerjack?) (v.), of swagger and hijack, apparently AAVE/"street" slang for: to steal with swagger. Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4. Spiked in usage around 2010 and 2013 (source).
 * - a kind of fish in Trinidad
 * sapaté in Papiamento (not spoken in Trinidad, but close) = shoemaker, from Portuguese sapateiro. Trinidad was colonized by Spain so it could be from zapato/zapatero instead.
 * There seems to be a Trinidadian term "sapatay mud" referring to the accumulation on the soles of one's shoes. The viewable extract at gives sapatay as Chloroscombrus chrysurus, and the different extract of the same book at  implies the term can refer to other members of the family Carangidae as well.
 * or – Israeli political term (see Christian Science Monitor, Uri Gordon p. 352)
 * There seems to be a Trinidadian term "sapatay mud" referring to the accumulation on the soles of one's shoes. The viewable extract at gives sapatay as Chloroscombrus chrysurus, and the different extract of the same book at  implies the term can refer to other members of the family Carangidae as well.
 * or – Israeli political term (see Christian Science Monitor, Uri Gordon p. 352)

T

 * - through an ordeal
 * - taxonomy
 * - verb intransitive = crack, disintegrate (OED 2)
 * tagliabue
 * taphomorph – (paleobiology, fossils) "morphological variants [of a taxon] attributable to preservation" – My source:. I assume it comes from, like taphonomy.
 * teacup pig
 * thecogen - technical term in insect cytology. Something to do with the developmental biology of bristles (setae). Coordinate term of tormogen and trichogen.
 * tuition centre
 * tagliabue
 * taphomorph – (paleobiology, fossils) "morphological variants [of a taxon] attributable to preservation" – My source:. I assume it comes from, like taphonomy.
 * teacup pig
 * thecogen - technical term in insect cytology. Something to do with the developmental biology of bristles (setae). Coordinate term of tormogen and trichogen.
 * tuition centre
 * thecogen - technical term in insect cytology. Something to do with the developmental biology of bristles (setae). Coordinate term of tormogen and trichogen.
 * tuition centre
 * tuition centre

V

 * valet case

X

 * : a type of microphone (apparently short for "X connector, locking connector, rubber boot")

Z

 * Zaklohpakap: a Mayan language (obsolete name?), possibly what is now called Mamaindê