upscale nuptials |
A blogsite offering entertaining daily oddities since January 2020. There are now over fifteen hundred posts in these four years. Images -- photographic, computer-simulated and poetic -- are drawn from daily life as well as from poems and wordplay grouped by topic on our parent blog "Edifying Nonsense". The poetry displayed is all original (as are the song-lyrics), although portions evolved through rigorous editing on a collaborative website.
upscale nuptials |
BTW, should you ever need to log in directly to this blog, its simple address is...
daily.edifyingnonsense.com
(Just type that into your browser search-line.)
cypress 'knees' abound at the edge of the swamp |
black swan, approaching feeder |
turtles particularly enjoy the sunny day |
"take my advice" |
black swan couple, female nesting |
whooper swan, outstretched wings |
"Y'all come back tomorrow for some more." |
waterfowl flotilla Black (Australian) swans, Canada geese, et al. |
See the post of Feb 21, 2021 on this blog for an illustrated verse about the mute swan.
See this blogpost for Giorgio's recent poetic take on the trumpeter swan.
links for any date: scroll over to the calendar-based listings of 'Past Posts' in the righthand column on this page, choose your year and then month of interest, and then select (by clicking) the post of your choice.
To review the poetic effusion that we have accumulated about binomial phrases, proceed to our blog "Edifying Nonsense", and check out the post 'Grandpa Greg's Grammar: Binomial Expressions'. Click HERE ! (Or, if you prefer, you could look over this stuff on Giorgio's Facebook photo-albums.)
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 !
chocolate matzoh pieces (B's Pesach recipe) See you next year! |
In this post, we continue with our novel form of poetic wordplay. Inspired by Japanese haiku poetry, this new form is used for a terse verse with a total of 17 syllables displayed on three lines. Unlike its classic Japanese analogue, this concoction does not mandate the precise distribution of the syllables among the three lines, but does stipulate that each word in the poem be included in a palindromic phrase or sentence in English (i.e. one that can be read either forwards or backwards).
And, just in case you have forgotten what palindromes are about, your blogsite hosts have arranged a serial set of brief lessons on the topic ('Political Palindromes') which you can review by clicking HERE.
JJ. at his younger bro's bar mitzvah celebration |
ORIGINAL SONG: "Let It Be", The Beatles, 1970.
GREENVILLE
Greenville: Falls Park, and the Liberty Bridge over the Reedy |
Belltower at Furman University, Paris Mountain in the background |
|
CONGAREE NATIONAL PARK
forests of cypress knees |
unusually large temperature discrepancy |