Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Strange New Olympic verbs....
10 Answers
I'm watching the diving. I thought that the verb "to medal" was bad enough.
In diving, the dives are graded according to degrees of difficulty, which affect the judges' marks.
The commentator has just said "that dive is 'out-degree-of-difficultying' the previous one...."
In diving, the dives are graded according to degrees of difficulty, which affect the judges' marks.
The commentator has just said "that dive is 'out-degree-of-difficultying' the previous one...."
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Medal used as a verb has been in use since at least 1822, see here, http:// blog.ox forddic ...s-wh os-meda lling-n ow/
sorry to see the OED using spike when they just mean rise, TCL. If spike is to be used in this statistical sense it ought to mean a sharp rise followed by a sharp fall, since that's what a spike looks like.
I suppose we would once have said "bemedalled", but the prefix be- doesn't get used much in modern English.
I suppose we would once have said "bemedalled", but the prefix be- doesn't get used much in modern English.
I loved that Calvin and Hobbes link
http:// www.jon athanne ...ingW eirdsLa nguage. gif
(One of the very few comic strips named after philosophers)
http://
(One of the very few comic strips named after philosophers)
Using one part of speech - eg noun as verb - has been part of the development of English for ages. Whether these coinages find a lasting place in the language depends entirely on whether speakers find it convenient or worth using.
Thus 'to medal' is here to stay, given - as TCL says above - that it has been around for about 200 years. To 'out-degree-of-difficulty' I can confidently predict will not catch on for the simple reason that it will never replace 'more difficult than'!
Thus 'to medal' is here to stay, given - as TCL says above - that it has been around for about 200 years. To 'out-degree-of-difficulty' I can confidently predict will not catch on for the simple reason that it will never replace 'more difficult than'!
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