Wordle with SPOILERS

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T4tomo

Legendary Member
Why are you doing this? Why would you turn a conversation about a trivial word game into some sort of patronising lecture/ point scoring exercise? I'm watching your answer closely, as it will affect forum settings within my control. I don't need childish nonsense as part of my daily routine.

Light-hearted banter ^_^

I agree with you on snafu though, that is really an acronym masquerading as a word, but 'mericans are in charge of Wordle.
 

Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
I don't remember snafu. So I looked it up. If we can keep arguing for another day then it will be exactly a year since it came up.

1712573583857.png
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
Mais non...
View attachment 726949
[ https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/voila ]

et voilà! ;)

Ooh là là

But yeah, I think we can end the conversation or else it will go on for ever.

Your dictionary or mine:

voila.jpg


If you can't read that, it goes voided, voile, volotia. I would respectfully suggest that if you asked 100 people what language voila was in, not a single one of them would say English.

What I completely agree with you is that we are done with this one. And I won't be bothering with any comments in future.
 
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Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
Your dictionary or mine:

Mine of course. Yours looks like a fax from the 1980s. I think that the OED is generally considered to be the most respected reference in cases like this, and it has voila. https://www.oed.com/search/dictionary/?scope=Entries&q=voila

Its definition ends rather fittingly for this discussion: That is all, there is nothing more to do or say. :laugh:
(It has snafu and fubar too so yar boo)

Incidentally I read a really interesting book last year called The Surgeon of Crowthorne about William Chester Minor. He was a 19th century American doctor, who became mentally unstable and committed a murder in London. While in Broadmoor he made significant contributions to the OED. He also chopped off part of his own anatomy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Chester_Minor
 

Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
No, that was a scan from my Collins dictionary.

To be fair my 2 volume shorter OED that I bought in the early 80s also doesn't have voila. But I'll stick with the more recent references that keep up with current usage.
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
....Incidentally I read a really interesting book last year called The Surgeon of Crowthorne about William Chester Minor. He was a 19th century American doctor, who became mentally unstable and committed a murder in London. While in Broadmoor he made significant contributions to the OED. He also chopped off part of his own anatomy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Chester_Minor
When I lived in Devon as a young lad we used to regularly see a chap who camped permanently in a clearing alongside a road outside Exeter, (from memory). He was always immaculately turned out, with a neat camp around his tent. I don't know his name, but he was famous as a crossword compiler for The Times. He lived as he did because of claustraphobia, which he had to such an extent that when he was taken to hospital in old age he was actually cared for in a bed outside on a balcony.
 

Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
I managed to get it to accept ARSEY as a guess today. I thought it would make my life difficult and refuse it with an error message so I warned it: "Don't you get arsey with me". And it didn't.
 

BrumJim

Forum Stalwart (won't take the hint and leave...)
Yesterday I chose "brava" rather than the more obvious "bravo". Penny dropped, and for my last go, tried "bravo", only missed the 'o' and submitted "bravi" instead without realising it. Was accepted as a word. Anyone ever used "bravi"? Just going to look up what it means.
 
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