January 4, 2022

JAN 4, a brief saga: drug development










  For the purpose of this blog, a 'brief saga' is defined as a poem, usually narrative, but occasionally expository, that tell its story in at least 15 lines. Most commonly, the format involves three stanzas in limerick form, constituting a single submission to the online humor site 'Omnificent English Dictionary iLimerick Form'. On the OEDILF site, rigorous standards for content and format are involved in a collaborative editing process that may take several weeks to over a year. 

  Generally, OEDILF has not been enormously welcoming of multi-verse submissions, but Giorgio Coniglio has persisted, and the OEDILF number for each accepted multiverse poem is shown here on the slide with its first verse. 


To access the next 'brief saga' on this blog, proceed to... 'a gnat and a nit'. 
To access the most recent previous 'brief saga', back up to 'avian digestion'.


January 3, 2022

JAN 3, poetry of healthcare: Lewis Carroll's 'the Valgus and the Carbuncle'






You can view these informative verses in a wider context by proceeding to the collection 'Poetry of Healthcare' on our full-service blog "Edifying Nonsense". Click HERE ! (or if you prefer, you can view them on Facebook in Giorgio's photo-albums.)



January 2, 2022

JAN 2, etymology: 'dollar'






For fans of etymology, we have three blogposts with collections of verses about word-origins such as the one above on our more encyclopedic blog "Edifying Nonsense". You can start to review some of this intriguing material by clicking HERE, and then following the links!


January 1, 2022

JAN 1, insects: toothpick grasshoppers









 You can review Giorgio's other verses about pesty and occasionally beneficial insects, as  collected in 'Buzzwords: Verses about Insects' on the full-service blog "Edifying Nonsense". Click HERE ! (or if you prefer, you can view them on Facebook in Giorgio's photo-albums.)


SUPPLEMNENTAL PHOTO: locust swarm





December 31, 2021

DEC 31, death and the afterlife: decease in the crease




Authors' Note: In hockey, an assist is recognition awarded to a player who passes the puck to the goal-scorer at a key point in play. A sudden death system for resolving the winner in games tied at the end of regulation play has generally been used in organized hockey since its inception. The (goal) crease is an area demarcated by colored ice directly in front of the goal line where the goalie (goalkeeper) is not to be interfered with by attackers.

Although professional hockey has been the undisputed domain of males, more and more women are participating in Canada's national sport as amateurs and international competitors.


 You can review more poems about 'Death and the Afterlife' in context ('death and the afterlife') on our full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'. Click HERE!
 

December 30, 2021

DEC 30, poetic Panama palindrome parody: 'if final ... Panama'






 

You can review the whole collection of our illustrated verses on this topic  by proceeding to 'Reversing Verse: Panama palindrome parodies' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'.


And, if you are interested in seeing innumerable examples of spoofy palindrome variants on wordplay maps, you could embark on a journey through a collection of  blogposts entitled 'Tourists' Palindromic Guides: The Americas, #1 -#4'. All that's needed is to click on the link.



December 29, 2021

DEC 29, curtained verse: orchestral pecking-order

 EDITORS' WARNING: You must be at least 12 years of age to read this post! 






Authors' Note: In casual speech, musicians in a symphony may be referred to by their rankings in their orchestral sections, as in "Flo, the first flute". 

 
You can review other mildly scurrilous illustrated verses in a wider context by proceeding to 'Curtained verse: Faintly Obscene (Selected) Limericks' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'.

December 28, 2021

DEC 28, patients and their maladies: non-tumorous '-oma's,




Authors' Note  Well, yes.
  With advancing age, life becomes a minefield of unexpected diseases; for several of these, the suffix -oma, implying growth or swelling, is used although an underlying neoplastic process is not present.

  In the elderly, subdural hematomas or intracranial bleeds (within the envelope of membranes surrounding the brain) may occur with minimal trauma or even spontaneously, particularly if anticoagulants have been used. 
  The patchy process of atherosclerosis may involves the left main coronary artery or its major division, the left anterior descending artery. In such cases, sudden clotting with blockage of the artery may occur at the site of atheroma, and cause a severe heart attack with cardiac arrest, a major cause of sudden death in the middle-aged and elderly population.
  This verse is a companion piece to others by the author dealing with malignant tumors and benign tumors; these are found in the collection of 'Oncologic Verses'.


You can catch other instances of Dr. G.H.'s explanation of medical terminology on posts on this daily blog:
 HERE, re malignant tumors (-omas),
 HERE, re benign tumors (-omas)

Or, you can review the entire collection of poems about 'Patients and their Maladies' on our more encyclopedic blog "Edifying Nonsense". Click HERE.  





December 27, 2021

DEC 27, binomial phrases: fossil words





Authors' Note:   The concept of fossil words derives from the fact that dozens of obsolete and obscure words, e.g. betwixt, retain currency only as a part of idioms whose use has continued into modern times. The final line of the verse refers to beck and callgoods and chattels, and hither and yon.
 
 More examples of fossil words and phrases are given in the verse hem and haw.


To review the poetic effusion that we have accumulated about binomial phrases, proceed to our blog "Edifying Nonsense", and enjoy the post  'Grandpa Greg's Grammar: Binomial Expressions'. Click HERE ! 

There is also an entire collection of lyrics to patter songs, somewhat older material, dedicated to various kinds of binomials, that provides more didactic material and an extensive series of examples, and allows you to sing these expressions for your own enjoyment, or for that of others around you. Click HERE !


December 26, 2021

DEC 26, reptiles: geckos (on ceiling)









Authors' Note: A profusion of tiny setae (filament-hairs) on the lizards' palm-pads, as shown by electron microscopy, explain the gecko's unusual gravity-defying mobility.


You can review these illustrated verses in a wider context by proceeding to 'Uprooted verse: Limericks about Reptiles on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'.

December 25, 2021

DEC 25, personal and family history: a brief personal bio xxxxxxxxxxxxx Nate


















That's my older brother in 1945 holding Dad's photo;
  (lower left). I wasn't quite on the scene, yet!



Mom and Dad with their offspring,
50th anniversary celebration





Update:


seasonal gourmet feast, 2021:
 (a dual-mode family celebration)
Xmas lunch in the Carolina lowcountry



December 24, 2021

DEC 24, classic palindrome: 'a Santa at NASA'


HAPPY BIRTHDAY, TROOPER, WHEREVER YOU ARE!

AND

HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL












You can review these illustrated verses in a wider context by proceeding to 'Reversing Verse: Limericks About Classic Palindromes' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'. 



seasonal scene pre -Xmas:
office lobby in Toronto
 


December 23, 2021

DEC 23, variant Nantucket limerick: zoophile from Nanoose







 Such adventures show etiquette loose.






Authors' Note: You can find another daily offering on this blog dealing with zoophilia by clicking HERE.

Or, you could review our entire collection of spoof verses based on the iconic Nantucket limericks on our full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense' by clicking HERE.
 

December 22, 2021

DEC 22, planet-saving verse: shorebird council's demand





You can review these illustrated verses in a wider context by proceeding to 'Immersible Verse: Limericks about Waterfowl' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'. 



ruddy turnstone at a narrow Carolina beach-strip
 littered with oyster-shells. This bird is a long distance migrator, roosting in the high Arctic.



shorebird, seen near Toronto lakeshore: killdeer?



turnstones (running), and oystercatcher


You can help save the planet by viewing all our verses in this series at "Edifying Nonsense". Click HERE!




December 21, 2021

DEC 21, Carolina lowcountry: delicious December days


 Editor's Note: As old age and aversion to cold weather have descended, we spend time whenever we can in the Carolina low-country. It is a cliché to say that winter is shorter in more southerly places, but that sometimes means that there are days when winter rages back in central Canada, but is not in evidence down here in lotus-land. On this particular day we learned from our weather-app that it would be snowy back home in Toronto, but would be a short-sleeve day in coastal Carolina.




Note the mid-day temperatures in Toronto and Charleston, South Carolina




The boardwalk takes you past the trawlers at Shem Creek, Mt. Pleasant, SC






Pelicans perched at creekside awaiting the returning fishers



Tranquility near the center of suburban action




Setting up for a community-center wedding with a harbor view



\

Grillwork fence with wisteria seedpods and a view of a 'sea' of jonquils
 






Geometric restored oyster-bed at the Pitt St. Bridge park,
Arthur Ravenel Bridge in background
 



American white ibises in the marsh


white ibis in flight





cormorants on dock




seasonal decor at the beach




toothpick grasshopper on papyrus leaf




pizza delivery boxes in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina,
touting service to 'the Lowcountry'