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The Deeper Meaning of Liff
Douglas Adams
John Lloyd
其他書名
A Dictionary of Things There Aren't Any Words for Yet--But There Ought to Be
出版
Crown
, 2005-04-26
主題
Humor / Topic / Language
Humor / Form / Puns & Wordplay
Reference / Dictionaries
ISBN
0307238741
9780307238740
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=Ldz4FNbHaTAC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
A rollicking, thought-provoking dictionary for the modern age, featuring definitions for those things we don't have words for, from the
New York Times
bestselling author behind
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
, Douglas Adams, and TV producer John Lloyd.
Does the sensation of
Tingrith
(1) make you yelp? Do you bend sympathetically when you see someone
Ahenny
(2)? Can you deal with a
Naugatuck
(3) without causing a
Toronto
(4)? Will you suffer from
Kettering
(5) this summer?
Probably. You are almost certainly familiar with all these experiences but just didn’t know that there are words for them. Well, in fact, there aren’t—or rather there weren’t, until Douglas Adams and John Lloyd decided to plug these egregious linguistic
lacunae
(6). They quickly realized that just as there are an awful lot of experiences that no one has a name for, so there are an awful lot of names for places you will never need to go to. What a waste. As responsible citizens of a small and crowded world, we must all learn the virtues of recycling(7) and put old, worn-out but still serviceable names to exciting, vibrant, new uses. This is the book that does that for you:
The Deeper Meaning of Liff
—a whole new solution to the problem of
Great Wakering
(8)
1—The feeling of aluminum foil against your fillings.
2—The way people stand when examining other people’s bookshelves.
3—A plastic packet containing shampoo, mustard, etc., which is impossible to open except by biting off
the corners.
4—Generic term for anything that comes out in a gush, despite all your efforts to let it out carefully, e.g., flour into a white sauce, ketchup onto fish, a dog into the yard, and another naughty meaning that we can’t put on the cover.
5—The marks left on your bottom and thighs after you’ve been sitting sunbathing in a wicker chair.
6—God knows what this means
7—For instance, some of this book was first published in Britain twenty-six years ago.
8—Look it up yourself.