#94012
01/31/2003 5:26 PM
  
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Fomentation (Fo`men*ta"tion) n. [. fomentatio: cf. F. fomentation.] 
  1. (Med.) (a) The act of fomenting; the application of warm, soft, medicinal substances, as for the purpose of easing pain, by relaxing the skin, or of discussing tumors. (b) The lotion applied to a diseased part.
  2. Excitation; instigation; encouragement.
 
  I wonder if the second of the widely disparate definitions may not have arisen by confusion  with "fermentation".
 
  
 
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#94013
01/31/2003 5:28 PM
  
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Formorian - a member of Celtic legendary sea robbers.
 
  
 
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#94014
01/31/2003 5:41 PM
  
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Forficiform - shaped like a pair of scissors. Forfex (||For"fex) n. [L.] A pair of shears. Pope. 147 The peer now spreads the glitt'ring forfex wide, 148 T' inclose the lock; now joins it, to divide. 149 Ev'n then, before the fatal engine clos'd, 150 A wretched Sylph too fondly interpos'd; 151 Fate urg'd the shears, and cut the Sylph in twain,
  Forficate (For"fi*cate) a. [L. forfex, forficis, shears.] (Zoöl.) Deeply forked, as the tail of certain birds.
  Forficula (||For*fic"u*la) n. [L., small shears, scissors, dim. of forfex shears.] (Zoöl.) A genus of insects including the earwigs. See Earwig, 1.
 
  
 
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#94015
01/31/2003 6:06 PM
  
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 other           “To stop a leak  at sea. To haul over a leak a sail, a tarpaulin,or a bag made           of old canvas and filled with pulled rope yarns.           (Obsolete.) Also called fodder.           
 
  
 
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#94016
01/31/2003 6:20 PM
  
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The francolin belongs to the pheasant family.                        It is almost 50 cm long and weighs 2 kilos. The                        gaudy colours of the male feathers vary from                        brown to red with white stripes. The females'                        one are brown with a yellow spot on the neck.                        Both have a small head and a stocky body and                        for this reason they prefer to walk on the grass                        rather than fly. They live in small groups and                        they pick up their feed from the ground as                        domestic poultry does. During the mating                        season the group divides in pairs and nest in                        the ground. The female hatches 5-6 eggs and                        the chicks are breeded by both adults. 
 
  
 
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#94017
01/31/2003 7:05 PM
  
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In reply to:
  of discussing tumors.  
  OK, wwh. This is hilarious medical talk to the non-medical person. You foment tumors and then you discuss them. Ha!  Now, let us in on what it really means in medical kingdom to discuss tumors.
  I have this mental image of modern doctors fomenting a tumor--and then putting on their witch doctor headresses, doing a dance around the tumor, and then discussing the tumor in order to relieve the patient:
  Doctor A:  "It looks like an inconspicucous little tumor."
  Doctor B:  "Nice shade of red."
  Doctor A:  "Fuschia, actually."
  Doctor B: "No, not quite fuschia. I think it's magenta."
  Doctor A: "Too bad it won't stay around for long. There's something about its shape that's rather appealing."
  Doctor B: "What would you call that shape...an obelisk?"
  Doctor A: "Not quite...more an widened pyramid, don't you think?"
 
  And so on till the discussed tumor disappeared.
  So, wwh, please tell us (me) what it really means to discuss a tumor!
 
   
 
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#94018
01/31/2003 9:17 PM
  
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Dear WW: guess what the first meaning of "discuss" is in 1913 Webster? Discuss (Page: 423)
  Dis*cuss" (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Discussed (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Discussing.] [L. discussus, p. p. of discutere to strike asunder (hence came the sense to separate mentally, distinguish); dis- + quatere to shake, strike. See Quash.] 
  1. To break to pieces; to shatter. [Obs.] Sir T. Browne. 
  2. To break up; to disperse; to scatter; to dissipate; to drive away; -- said especially of tumors. 
       Many arts were used to discuss the beginnings of new affection. Sir H. Wotton.
       A pomade . . . of virtue to discuss pimples. Rambler.
 
  
 
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#94019
01/31/2003 10:21 PM
  
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decussate 
                            SYLLABICATION:                                        de·cus·sate                          PRONUNCIATION:                                        AUDIO: d-kst, dk-st     KEY                              TRANSITIVE &                             INTRANSITIVE                                   VERB:                                        Inflected forms: de·cus·sat·ed, de·cus·sat·ing,                                        de·cus·sates                                        To cross or become crossed so as to form an X; intersect.                                ADJECTIVE:                                        1. Intersected or crossed in the form of an X.                                         2. Botany Arranged on a stem in opposite pairs at right                                        angles to those above or below, resulting in four vertical                                        rows: decussate leaves.                              ETYMOLOGY:                                        Latin decussre, decusst-, from decussis, the number                                        ten, intersection of two lines (from the Romans' use of X                                        for the numeral 10), a ten-as coin : decem, ten; see dek                                        in Appendix I + assis, as (coin).                            OTHER FORMS:                                        de·cussately —ADVERB
  Also used in neuroanatomy to describe nervous pathways crossing from left to right, and right to left.
                        
 
  
 
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#94020
02/03/2003 4:16 AM
  
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Dr. Bill, do you have more historical background on these Celtic pirates? Or maybe Rubrick? (Before I LIU...legends are always better heard as a good yarn before looking up the dry facts)
 
 
  
 
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#94021
02/03/2003 12:24 PM
  
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For more on yon legends I shall have to search.
 
  
 
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