I’ll be working as an assistant to an Environmental Studies researcher! Lots of writing involved! WooHooHOooO!
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Speaking of genetic testing…
Senate Passes Bill to Ban Genetic Discrimination
(side note: fear of discrimination is the reason my madre has not been tested for genetic abnormalities)
The promise of an era of personalized medicine based on genetic testing long has been haunted by a disturbing possibility: The same data that could alert people to serious medical problems might be used to deny them jobs or insurance.
But Thursday the Senate voted 95-0 to outlaw such discrimination, with the House expected to add its approval quickly.
“It’s the first civil-rights bill of the new century of life sciences,” Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., said. “We made sure today that our laws reflect the (scientific) advances we are making.”
When Bananas Ruled The World
“Intrigue. Power. Corruption. Death. Sex. The history of oil has nothing on that of the yellow fruit.”
By Katharine Mieszkowski
unexpected reminders
I receive Word of the Day emails from dictionary.com and the wordsmith; I write the words and their definitions in a small notebook I keep on the dining room table. Receiving the emails is an exercise to improve my vocabulary, but, unfortunately, my memory is weak, so I keep the notebook as an additional reference. I’ve been too busy this week to keep up with the daily emails, so I’ve been catching up with them this morning. The emails from dictionary.com include snips from newspaper and magazine articles, demonstrating how the word of the day is used in a sentence.
The word for April 17th was roister: To engage in boisterous merrymaking; to revel; to carouse. I was struck by the similarities between roister and boisterous (in meaning and in sound), and wondered why boisterous was never chopped down to boister and turned into an intransitive verb (tho, checking the online etymology dictionary, originally boisterous meant rough or coarse—not quite the same way it’s defined today). I moved to the examples of roister used in a sentence and there I saw a line by Michael Browning, a writer I’ve mentioned in this space before:
. . .the bullying, lying, lily-livered, lecherous, roistering, brandy-swigging, battle-fleeing, toad-eating Harry Paget Flashman, whose charming roguery has won him a worldwide following.
— Michael Browning, “Flashman’ Trio Fine Fun, Leaves Us Shouting ‘More!'” The Palm Beach Post September 24, 2000
This is the second time I’ve seen Michael’s writing referred to by Dictionary.com. His writing provided an example for the use of the word uxorious too. (My memory retained this one, thanks to seeing his name attached to it.)
personal mottos
Who am I, that I should not make a fool of myself?
–WB Yeats