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#150276 11/16/05 02:13 AM
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Loquens is the present participle of the Latin verb loquor -- speak/talk

So loquens = speaking/talking


Bingley
#150277 11/16/05 05:57 AM
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iconicity fits the bill quite well, thank you, since I was looking for the correspondence of a visual message with a visual impression.

#150278 11/16/05 12:15 PM
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In case you're interested "Loquens" also yielded this definition in my mythology dictionary:

Aius Locutius
[Roman] When in 387 BCE the Gauls moved towards Rome, a certain Caedicius heard for several days a mysterious voice from the shrubbery on the Forum Romanum. The voice warned against the Gallic attack and advised to fortify the walls of Rome. Caedicius went to the Roman authorities but they did not believe his story. The attackers found Rome virtually undefended and entered without much resistance. When the enemy was finally driven out, a temple was built on this place in honor of this warning diety, who was named Aius Locutius or Loquens.

#150279 11/16/05 12:21 PM
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Since I feel in a speculative mood today, I wonder if there is a term for the very possibility of articulating an unarticulated sensory impression in the same "channel", so to speak (words for sounds both address the auditory channel, but I am hard pressed to find a visual analog of onomatopoeia - not to speak of the olfactory pathway..)

This word is not completely irrelevant to your question :

synaesthesia

noun

A condition in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another, as when the hearing of a sound produces the visualization of a color.

A sensation felt in one part of the body as a result of stimulus applied to another, as in referred pain.

The description of one kind of sense impression by using words that normally describe another.


And, come to think of it, this was an idea Arthur Rimbaud addressed in his work [1] for which he coined a term... something like "discorrelation" ; damn this infernal lethologica!

[1] "The poet makes himself into a seer by a long, tremendous and reasoned derangement of all the senses." —Arthur Rimbaud

Last edited by Homo Loquens; 11/16/05 12:40 PM.
#150280 11/16/05 03:04 PM
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loquens = speaking/talking Ah. Thank you. And thanks for the Aius story, Logwood.

#150281 11/21/05 07:47 PM
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...and have you noticed how most of us tend to be more than a bit loquatious, too...

#150282 11/21/05 08:29 PM
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Quote:

...and have you noticed how most of us tend to be more than a bit loquatious, too...




...as often as not with our interlocutors...

#150283 11/23/05 06:59 AM
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Would you extend the meaning of the word loquatious to our exchanges via keyboard? Isn't it closely linked with oral communication?

#150284 11/23/05 08:15 AM
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Quote:

...and have you noticed how most of us tend to be more than a bit loquatious, too...




Does this mean talkative, or is it an adjectivisation of a rather delicious fruit that grows particluarly well in the Rawalpindi region? I ask merely because while my M-W offers loquacious for "talkative", it stops at loquat when trying with a t in the place of the c.

#150285 11/23/05 02:57 PM
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...and loquat is completely unrelated, coming from a Chinese (Canton) term for an Asiatic tree.

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