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#95475 02/13/03 08:18 PM
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An adjective coined by some historians, referring to the period of Henry VIII.


#95476 02/13/03 08:20 PM
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herdic
n.
5after P. Herdic (1824-88), U.S. inventor6 a low-hung public carriage of the late 19th-cent., with a back entrance and seats along the sides



#95477 02/13/03 08:23 PM
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heresiarch
n.
5LL(Ec) haeresiarcha < Gr hairesiarchcs, leader of a school < hairesis (see HERESY) + 3archcs, leader < archein, to begin, lead6 the founder or head of a heresy or heretical sect



#95478 02/13/03 08:26 PM
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Herrenvolk - Hitler's Master Race


#95479 02/13/03 08:28 PM
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heterodyne
adj.
5HETERO3 + DYNE6 designating or of the combination of two different radio frequencies to produce beats whose frequencies are equal to the sum or difference of the original frequencies
vi.
3dyned#, 3dyn#ing to combine two different frequencies so as to produce beats



#95480 02/13/03 08:30 PM
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Heterodont - having different types of teeth.
Homodont - having all teeth of the same type.


#95481 02/13/03 08:37 PM
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iatal (or hiatus) hernia
a hernia of part of the stomach into the opening in the diaphragm through which the esophagus passes

One of the most famous medical cases of the twenties was that of Alice Jane McHenry - "the girl
with the uspide down stomach " who made the Truesdale Clinic in Fall River, MA, famous for a
short time. A large defect in the diaphragm allowed her stomach to be up between her l;ungs.


#95482 02/13/03 08:39 PM
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hiddenite
n.
5after W. E. Hidden, U.S. mineralogist who discovered it (1879)6 a rare, yellowish to emerald-green variety of spodumene, a semiprecious stone



#95483 02/13/03 08:42 PM
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hieroglyphic
adj.
5Fr hi=roglyphique < LL hieroglyphicus < Gr hieroglyphikos < hieros, sacred (see HIERO3) + glyphein, to carve, hollow out: see GLYPH6
1 of, or having the nature of, hieroglyphics
2 written in hieroglyphics
3 hard to read or understand Also hi#er[o#glyph$i[cal
n.
1 a picture or symbol representing a word, syllable, or sound, used by the ancient Egyptians and others, instead of alphabetical letters
2 [usually pl.] a method of writing using hieroglyphics; picture writing
3 a symbol, sign, etc. hard to understand
4 [pl.] writing hard to decipher
hi#er[o#glyph$i[cal[ly
adv.



#95484 02/14/03 08:11 AM
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An adjective coined by some historians, referring to the period of Henry VIII.

Henrician! Ugh! They should have been shot to put us out of their misery.


#95485 02/14/03 08:59 AM
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An adjective coined by some historians, referring to the period of Henry VIII.

Henrician! Ugh! They should have been shot to put us out of their misery.


Damn straight! After all, there's already an adjective to describe the period of Henry - Halcyon.


#95486 02/14/03 11:18 AM
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Halcyon? Were they that good? Well, I s'pose this *is the 'Beheading Words' forum.


#95487 02/14/03 12:25 PM
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Wouldn't hieroglyph be a more precise term to refer to an individual character?


#95488 02/14/03 02:29 PM
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Hal's only scion worth mentioning was the Virgin queen.


#95489 02/14/03 03:03 PM
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Virgin queen who grew up without her mother because Hal had beheaded her. Imagine that kind of thing happening nowadays regularly. Poor little Elizabeth. No wonder she never married. {yeah, I know that ain't the primary reason she never married, but still.}


#95490 02/14/03 06:06 PM
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dxb - wwh got my feeble pun.


#95491 02/14/03 06:18 PM
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my feeble pun

fwiw, so did I, but I didn't want to ruin my reputation by admitting it.


#95492 02/14/03 08:00 PM
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Dear Faldage: Again I say, you need something for your dyspepsia.


#95493 02/14/03 08:23 PM
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I tole you an I tole you. I'm married to a good 'Lanta girl. Be givin me no dyspepsia.


#95494 02/18/03 02:10 PM
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dxb - wwh got my feeble pun.

Well, there were two or three threads of humour in there actually.


#95495 02/18/03 02:57 PM
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My favorite henrician recollection is that of Charles Laughton, in the role of Henry VIII,
stuffing himself with chicken, and throwing the bones backwards over his shoulder.


#95496 02/18/03 03:49 PM
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Laughton, a skilled actor, was required to present Henry as something approaching a buffoon and he made a memorable job of it. In fact Henry VIII was a true renaissance prince. He was educated in the classics, and spoke and wrote several languages fluently, including the prerequisite Latin. He studied philosophy and religion and often had heated debates with the learned thinkers of the age. He was an athlete and was skilled in the arts of war.

Henry wrote prose and poetry, but his real passion was always music. He composed masses (which are now lost) and ballads. He played several musical instruments and amassed a considerable collection of them over his lifetime.

Henry was obsessed with getting a male heir and, as all know, to this end he had six wives (linear, not parallel). There is a popular belief that they were mostly beheaded. In fact two were beheaded for adultery, a capital crime in a monarch's spouse at that time (the monarch could not afford to look foolish). Of the others, one died in childbirth, two were divorced and one survived him.



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