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ROSINANTE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (roz-uh-NAN-tee) 
  MEANING:  noun: An old, worn-out horse.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Rocinante, the name of Don Quixote’s horse. Don Quixote took four days to think of a lofty name for his horse, from Spanish rocín (an old horse: nag or hack) + ante (before, in front of). Earliest documented use: 1641.
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  ROSSINANTE - what Gioachino was called until he wrote the William Tell Overture and became famous   May - that's basically the same principle as yours !
  ROSINANTE - what the poker game did when the stakes went up
  ROSINANCE - how a violin bow makes such a luscious, rich, beautiful sound 
 
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ROSINANTE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (roz-uh-NAN-tee) 
  MEANING:  noun: An old, worn-out horse.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Rocinante, the name of Don Quixote’s horse. Don Quixote took four days to think of a lofty name for his horse, from Spanish rocín (an old horse: nag or hack) + ante (before, in front of). Earliest documented use: 1641.
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  ROSSINANTE - what Gioachino was called until he wrote the William Tell Overture and became famous   May - that's basically the same principle as yours !
  ROSINANTE - what the poker game did when the stakes went up
  ROSINANCE - how a violin bow makes such a luscious, rich, beautiful sound  Ha!  Those damn tourne potatoes and Escoffier.  Years ago at JW I got in trouble for turning Boccoli Polonaise into broccoli alla May.  Ah, to be a Rosinante or a Rossini....  
 
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So ten minutes ago.  From hair nation to Broadway, Finian's Rainbow. One if by sea,la nave...information is bogo. 
 
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 DORYPHORE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (DOR-uh-for) 
  MEANING:  noun: A pedantic or persistent critic.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From French doryphore (Colorado beetle, a potato pest), from Greek doruphoros (spear carrier). The author Harold Nicolson brought the word to English in its current sense. Earliest documented use: 1952.
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  PORYPHORE - any member of the second phylum of the animal kingdom
  DORYPHONE - part of the communication system on a lifeboat 
 
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 RATTY
  PRONUNCIATION:  (RAT-ee) 
  MEANING:  adjective: 1. Of, relating to, or full of rats. 2. Shabby. 3. Irritable; angry.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Old English raet (rat). Earliest documented use: 1852. ________________________________
  RATHY - angry...
  RAFTY - Finnish (like Huck)
  IRATTY - a teletype device used by the hearing impaired to discuss their Individual Retirement Account 
 
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 PULLULATE
  PRONUNCIATION: (PUHL-yuh-layt) 
  MEANING:  verb intr.: 1. To sprout or breed. 2. To swarm or teem. 3. To increase rapidly.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Latin pullulare (to sprout), from pullulus, diminutive of pullus (chicken, young animal), from Latin pullus (young animal). Ultimately from the Indo-European root pau- (few, little), which is also the source of few, foal, filly, pony, poor, pauper, poco, puerile, poltroon, punchinello, and catchpole. Earliest documented use: 1602. ____________________________
  PULLUWATE - do at least your share    PULLULATER - Sorry, kids, we can't go sledding until this afternoon
  PULLUPLATE - remove stuck dentures; can refer tp uppers or lowers, depending on how you pronounce it PULL-U-PLATE or PULL-UP-LATE
  
 
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 WINKLE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (WING-kuhl)  
  MEANING:   noun: A periwinkle, any of various mollusks with a spiral shell. verb tr.: To extract with effort or difficulty. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  For noun: Of uncertain origin. For verb: From the process of extracting a periwinkle from its shell with a pin for eating its meat. Earliest documented use: 1585.  ____________________________________
  INKLE - the first faint glimmer of an idea
  WINKE - a Deutche Pac-Man ghost
  WINKALE - triumph at the Organic Vegetable fair
 
  
 
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 WINKALE -  1.  triumph at the Organic Vegetable fair 2.  blink one eye at that neat new beer 
 
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 CAPRIOLE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (KAP-ree-ol) 
  MEANING:  noun: 1. A playful leap: caper. 2. A leap made by a trained horse involving a backward kick of the hind legs at the top of the leap.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Middle French capriole (caper) or Italian capriola (leap), from Latin capreolus (goat), diminutive of caper (goat). Earliest documented use: 1580.
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  APRIOLE - what's left when you remove the pit from the fuzzy orange fruit
  CAPRIOSE - goatlike
  CAPRIOLE - what Cal Ripken covers his head with 
 
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CAPRIODE – What Byron wrote after a boat trip out of Napoli. 
 
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 KENNING
  PRONUNCIATION:  (KEN-ing) 
  MEANING:  noun: A figurative, usually compound, expression used to describe something. For example, whale road for an ocean and oar steed for a ship.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Old Norse kenna (to know). Ultimately from the Indo-European root gno- (to know), which is also the source of know, recognize, acquaint, ignore, diagnosis, notice, normal, prosopagnosia, gnomon, anagnorisis, and agnosia. Earliest documented use: 1320. Kennings were used especially in Old Norse and Old English poetry. ___________________
  iKENNING  - Scottish computer knowledge
  K-INNING -  1. when the pitcher strikes out the side in baseball 2.  a VERY long cricket match 
  VENNING - circular reasoning
  
 
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 MOT JUSTE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (mo ZHOOST) 
  MEANING:   noun: The right word.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From French mot juste (right word). Earliest documented use: 1896. A related term is bon mot.
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  MORT JUSTE - martyrdom
  MOT JOUSTE - fighting words
  MAT JUSTE - where Right and Wrong duke it out 
 
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 Not Juste- Hella.....Unfair Dot Juste- Hecka Fair Lot Juste-HellaFair
  
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 HOLOPHRASM
  PRONUNCIATION:  (HOL-uh-fraz-um) 
  MEANING:  noun 1. A one-word sentence, for example, “Go.” 2. A complex idea conveyed in a single word, for example, “Howdy” for “How do you do?”
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Greek holos (whole) + phrasis (speech). Earliest documented use: 1862.
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  HOLOPHERASM - orders given by Nebuchadnezzar's Commanding General
  HOOPHRASM - excitement about basketball
  HOLOPHRASE - a complete sentence 
  
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BOLOPHRASM – I let my machete do the talking. 
 
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 POCHISMO
  PRONUNCIATION:  (po-CHEEZ-mo) 
  MEANING:  noun 1. An English word borrowed into Spanish, often given a Spanish form or spelling, such as mopear (to mop) instead of trapear or limpiar. 2. American customs, attitudes, etc., adopted by a Hispanic in the US and perceived pejoratively by his compatriots.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Spanish pocho (discolored, faded). Earliest documented use: 1944.
  NOTES:  Pocho is a derogatory term used by a Hispanic for a fellow countryman living in the US who is perceived to have lost his culture and adopted American attitudes, and speaks Spanglish (Spanish heavily influenced by English).
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  PACHISMO - thickness
  POCKISMO - toughness, proved by surviving Variola 
  OCHISMO - the Eightfold Way 
 
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PORCHISMO – Being fearless until just before reaching the front sidewalk. 
 
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ANTONOMASIA
  PRONUNCIATION:  (an-toh-noh-MAY-zhuh) 
  MEANING:  noun 1. The use of an epithet or title for a proper name, for example, the Bard for Shakespeare. 2. The use of the name of a person known for a particular quality to describe others, such as calling someone brainy as Einstein. Also known as eponym.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Latin, from Greek antonomazein (to name differently), from anti- (instead of) + onoma (name). Earliest documented use: 1589. ____________________________
 
  AUTONOMASIA - speaking without thinking
  ANTONOMARIA - West Side Story in a nutshell
  GANTONOMASIA - uneasiness about a Cuban port (and prison)
  
 
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 DINT
  PRONUNCIATION:   (dint) 
  MEANING:  noun: 1. Force, power. 2. A dent. verb tr.: To make a dent or to drive in with force.
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Old English dynt (blow). Earliest documented use: 897. ____________________________
  DONT - refrain from force or power
  DINUT - a two-holed pastry enjoyed with coffee
  DIPT - what you did with your DINUT 
 
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 MOIL
  PRONUNCIATION:  (moyl)  
  MEANING: verb intr.: 1. To work hard; to toil. 2. To churn. verb tr.: To make wet or muddy. noun: 1. Hard work. 2. Confusion or turmoil. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Old French moillier (to moisten), from Latin mollis (soft). Ultimately from the Indo-European root mel- (soft), which also gave us malt, melt, mollify, smelt, enamel, and schmaltz. Earliest documented use: 1611. 
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  HMOIL - electronic messaging in the mountainous regions of China, Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand
  MONIL - my Parisian boy friend
  MNIL - I remember nothing
  
 
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Mail- letters and packages conveyed by the postal system
  Toil- to work extremely hard or incessantly 
 
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 GUFF
  PRONUNCIATION:  (guf)  
  MEANING:  noun: 1. Nonsense. 2. Insolent talk. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  Perhaps imitative. Earliest documented use: 1825.  _____________________________
  GUEFF - Thomaf Jefferfon takef a wild ftab at the anfwer
  QUFF - "Have a drink? No way!" (Or, if you insist, "No A!"}
  GUFOF - someone who wastes time when he should be working
  
 
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 WEFT
  PRONUNCIATION:  (weft) 
  MEANING:  noun: The threads that run across the width of a woven fabric and are interlaced through the warp (threads that run lengthwise).
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Old English wefta (weft). Ultimately from the Indo-European root webh- (to weave; to move quickly), which also gave us weave, webster, waffle, wave, waver, and wobble. Earliest documented use: 725. _________________________
  WEET - what bred is made from 
  WET - what it used to be made from
  WEPT - what they did to the crumbs on the floor after the bred was all et 
 
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guaff- typeset trickery in Plato's cave (no soup for you) 
 
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 QUAFF 
  PRONUNCIATION:  (kwof)  
  MEANING: verb tr., intr.: To drink deeply. noun: An alcoholic drink; also the act of drinking. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  Of unknown origin, probably imitative. Earliest documented use: 1521 ______________________________
  QUARF - a pier that can't make up its mind whether it's French (quai) or English (wharf)
  QUAFFL - a libation served in a hollowed-out quiddich ball, enjoyed after a major victory 
 
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QUARF - a pier that can't make up its mind whether it's French (quai) or English (wharf)     
 
  
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 GANNET 
  PRONUNCIATION:  (GAN-it)  
  MEANING:  noun: 1. A large seabird known for catching fish by diving from a height. 2. A greedy person. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Old English ganot. Ultimately from the Indo-European root ghans- (goose), which also gave us goose, gosling, gander, and gunsel. Earliest documented use: before 1000. Gannets’ reputation for being greedy isn’t deserved though.   ________________________
 
  GARNET - a bird that swears mildly when it misses the fish it's diving for
  GRANNET - a hard stone composed of little grains
  RANNET - 1.  sent up the flagpole (but no one saluted); 2. a small frog 
 
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bannet- bee bonnet        
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 Well, that's certainly not the Bees Knees...
  
 
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 SNIPE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (snyp) 
  MEANING: noun: 1. Any of various long-billed birds inhabiting marshy areas. 2. A shot from a concealed position.
  verb intr.: 1. To shoot from a concealed position. 2. To criticize in a harsh and unfair way, especially anonymously.
  ETYMOLOGY: Probably of Scandinavian origin. The shooting sense comes from the practice of snipe hunting. Earliest documented use: 1325. _____________________________
  SNILE - 1. the longest river in SAfrica 2. an ambivalent facial gesture, combining a sneer and a smile
  STIPE - infinite reimbursement (payment without end)
  SRIPE - the fruit is ready to eat 
 
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 Well, that's certainly not the Bees Knees...  
 ...lol I thought it was funny when I went back to the    link (after I posted the image).  Arrr! I'm not sure what this bannet says; maybe, "I'm busy."   kiss me quick   get a room   
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 DODO 
  PRONUNCIATION: (DO-do)  
  MEANING: noun: 1. An extinct, flightless bird from Mauritius, related to the pigeon but of the size of a turkey. 2. Someone or something that is old-fashioned, ineffective, or outdated. 3. A stupid person. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Portuguese doudo/doido (silly, fool). Ultimately from the Indo-European root ors- (buttocks) which also gave us ass, cynosure, and squirrel. Earliest documented use: 1628
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  DONO - what a physician should avoid before all other things (before "harm")
  CODO - 1. work together; see also DIDO  2. last word in an arbitrary line in an arbitrary fisherman's sea chanty
  DONDO - singular of DONDI, an extinct, flightless orphan from a 60-year-old comic strip
  
 
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 I'll take a shot at them:
  HODO - G-d's bounty (from the Hebrew)
  LODO - the yeast hasn't worked yet; give it more time to rise
  ÖODO - what you make egg-bread from 
  (And speaking of Hebrew, be sure not to mix up PODO AND KODO with TOHU AND BOHU...) 
 
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Hodo.  Keeping things "simple."  It rarely is.  
 
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 MAGPIE
  PRONUNCIATION:  (MAG-py)  
  MEANING:  noun: 1. Any of various birds, typically having a long tail and black-and-white plumage; also various other birds that resemble a magpie.   2. A chatterer. 3. A person who indiscriminately collect things, especially things of little value. 
  ETYMOLOGY:  From Mag (a nickname for Margaret) + pie (magpie), from Latin pica (magpie). The use of the name Mag is from the stereotypical association of women with chattering. Magpies have a (rather undeserved) reputation for chattering and hoarding, but they are some of the most intelligent animals. Two other words coined after them are pied and pica. Earliest documented use: 1589.  ________________________________
  NAGPIE - an inveterate collector of things of little value who won't stop chattering about it
  MANGPIE - a baked dessert made from a sweet aromatic tropical fruit
  MAGPINE - a conifer that attracts iron 
  MAGNIE - any object that looks larger that it really is 
 
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Tagpie- pie sent out at Christmas, often regifted
  Lagpie- thy breath is like the Steeme of apples; busted
  Agpie- pie used to transport vampire trappings; other ingredients include a deadly dose of garlic (Death at first bite) 
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