March 6, 2024

MAR 6, lexicon of word-pairs: legal doublets A to C

 

 Re PAGES: 

You, members of the audience of Daily Illustrated Nonsense, (D.I.N.), often have questions about the authors of this blog, and the purpose, history and organization of our online e-manations. To help answer these puzzlements, we have scrawled some material on the undated PAGES section of this blog. Please review these 'documents', although some remain under development. Although expansion of these explanations is contemplated, we admit to taking our time to write down what seems natural to us, but more outreach with this type of communication is planned.
So far, you can take a look at these important documents :
1) Our Blog (D.I.N.): Authors and Purpose (under construction)
2) Content of the blog, and its Historical Development
3) Distribution of Thematic Material

4) How Can I Contribute? (under construction)

a) Reprise of material posted on March 6 in previous years ...


2020: American satire, political anagrams (illustrated poem)
2021: exotic destination
, Swiss Alps (illustrated poem) 
2022: gun control verses, semi-automatic weapons (illustrated poem)
2023: garden intruders, papyrus (illustrated poem)

To access the details of any item in slide format, type its title, as displayed above in red font (e.g. ...Swiss Alps), into one of the two search bars at the the top of your blog-page. Underneath the slide(s) for each entertaining delight that you discover, you will find a clickable link that lets you easily explore a more widespread collection of wonderments (verse, photos, wordplay, song-lyrics etc.) on the topic of your choice. 




b) Today's Offering (Mar 22, 2024): 


Giorgio's lexicon of binomials (legal doublets)





You can proceed to the next blogpost in the lexicon series (legal doublets D to F) by clicking HERE. 

For readers with a musical bent, we have a song-cycle of 9 songs displaying the spectrum of these binomial expressions. They have lyrics stuffed with word-pairs, arranged to familiar tunes. You can readily access this singable treasure trove of binomial expressions of various types by clicking on the link for the first song, "WORD PAIRS", HERE

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