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Posted By: wwh chillblain - 11/11/02 02:45 AM
Another spelling bee word. Not in my dictionary. Only good site on Internet was in pdf, from
which parts cannot be copied. From prolonged exposure to cold, with inadequate clothing
a reddish painful swelling can develop, particularly over bony prominences.

pdf can be pretty damned frustrating

Posted By: Buffalo Shrdlu Re: chillblain - 11/11/02 10:28 AM
Bartleby came up with kibe, which used chillblain in the definition, but didn't have a definition for chillblain!



Posted By: Faldage Re: chillblain - 11/11/02 11:33 AM
didn't have a definition for chillblain

Bartleby doesn't have the spell correction that m-w does. Try chilblain and Viola!

http://www.bartleby.com/61/12/C0291200.html

Posted By: wwh Re: chillblain - 11/11/02 01:45 PM
Dear etaoin: My lousy vision screwed me again. Sorry. But dozens of sites used two "l"s.

Posted By: Buffalo Shrdlu Re: chillblain - 11/11/02 01:52 PM
no problem.
but why would they use a two ll chilblain in a definition?

and what does Viola have to do with all of this? is this becoming another music thread?

Posted By: Faldage Re: chillblain - 11/11/02 02:42 PM
what does Viola have to do with all of this?

Viola's yer aunt!

Posted By: wofahulicodoc Oh, the L with it! - 11/11/02 05:50 PM
Next challenge - complete the poem:

"A one-L chilblain, he's a ________..."

Posted By: wwh Re: Oh, the L with it! - 11/11/02 06:08 PM
A ruttin' pain. I got the tip of one ear frostbitten sliding in temperature about ten above (F)
and that apparently starteed auto-immune process leading to ankylosing spondylitis.

Posted By: of troy Re: chillblain - 11/15/02 01:55 PM
i am surprized Jackie has not commented, since i know she also likes the author Mary Stewart, and chilblain is a word often used in historical novels. it is the raw, red cracked, chapped skin one gets if you don't keep your hands warm and dry in cold weather..and a word i am pretty sure ms stewart has used.

dairy farmers, (and milkmaids) would get them, and so would fishermen and sailors.. and the poor.

like chapped lips, they are painful. and treated by a layer of grease (lanolin, or other such emoilients) to help the skin keep moist.

i have frequently seen chillblains is 'historical' but vaguely romantic novels, (Anya Seton comes to mind -- with the Winthrop Woman or Devil Water, or Katherine...)
allof ms Seton's books are 90 to 99% accurate in historical detail, but the emotional lives of the characters (all three named above are about women on the perifery of historical events) are made up.

The Winthrop Woman, is about Margaret (winthrop)Winthrop Feake Hallet, niece and daughter in law to John Winthrop, Governer General of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, who also was mother in law to John Bowne, (who in 1650, was tried and acciquited in Holland on religious grounds, he won the right to the free practice of faith in NY (then New Amsterdam).
While Margaret didn't do any thing spectactular, she did manage to meet and know may influencial people.

Hallets cove is still found on NYC maps (just below the Triboro bridge).



Posted By: Bingley Re: chillblain - 11/22/02 03:33 AM
We were told as children that if we came in out of cold weather and stood with our bottoms up against the radiator, we'd get chilblains on them.

Bingley
Posted By: Wordwind Re: chillblain - 11/22/02 07:27 AM
In reply to:

Try chilblain and Viola!


I wouldn't recommend a chilblain and a viola.

Now chilblains and a rousing chorus of "Ta-Ra-Ra-Boom-Dee-Ay" might work wonders.

No, Faldage. I'm really not that thick, even though I can't subtract 2000 from 1997.

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