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#106119 06/19/03 10:20 PM
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The Egyptian glossary gives:"DROMOS. . A straight, paved avenue flanked by sphinxes."
I was reminded of "aerodrome" which I think is a WWI British term for a small airport, of which was a straight
paved surface suitable for aircraft to take off from and land on.
All the other words using the root that I can remember are circular courses.


#106120 06/20/03 12:45 AM
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AHD4 list the Greek root dromos as meaning "racecourse". If you race horses at a hippodrome, bicycles at a velodrome and aeroplanes at an aerodrome, what do you race at a palindrome?


#106121 06/20/03 01:22 AM
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Would you race dromedaries in a dromedrome?
Notice etymology for dromedary gives dromos = runner. The circle part does not seem implicit.
rom[e[dar[y 7dr9m4! der#c8
n.,
pl. 3dar#ies 5ME dromedarie < OFr dromedaire < LL(Ec) dromedarius (camelus), dromedary (camel) < L dromas, dromedary (+ 3arius, 3ARY) < Gr dromas, dromos, a runner, running < dramein, to run < IE *drem3 < base *dra3, to run > Sans dr;mati, (he) runs6 an Arabian camel, esp. one trained for fast riding: see CAMEL, illus.



#106122 06/20/03 03:41 AM
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>what do you race at a palindrome?

yourself, most likely. palindromos is Gr. for 'running back again'

-joe (retrograde) friday


#106123 06/20/03 10:46 AM
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'running back again'

Yeah. AHD4 gives different meanings for dromos in its etymologies of hippodrome and palindrome.


#106124 06/21/03 02:13 AM
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The LSJ on Perseus gives race as the basic meaning of dromos:
http://makeashorterlink.com/?A2EF22005


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#106125 06/25/03 05:28 AM
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what do you race at a palindrome?


RACECAR


#106126 06/25/03 07:35 AM
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Cleverrr!


#106127 06/25/03 01:17 PM
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I looked up etymology of 'palindrome ' , and three sources said palin- = "again". Not sure how "back" gets into it.
"Roll me over, in the clover, and do it palin, pal in."


#106128 06/25/03 02:40 PM
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Referring to place, the basic meaning of the Greek palin is back, referring to time it means again. http:// http://makeashorterlink.com/?N33C22C05


The verb palindromeo and various similar nouns mean run again or run back/backwards (http://makeashorterlink.com/?P20E12C05).

Bingley


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#106129 06/25/03 02:46 PM
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I have to wonder if there's a word for chopping liver again?


#106130 06/25/03 03:09 PM
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Would that be in order to produce twice-chopped liver or yet more chopped liver?


#106131 06/25/03 04:04 PM
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While out walking I remembered a medical use of "drome" -
the premonitory symptoms that precede the onset of an illness, such as the "shaking chill" that comes before the intense fever of malaria.


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