There's a guy who's been awake since the Second World War
Today's word from The Calendar is great:
pitchkettled
meaning puzzled. I have no idea why, but I like it.
It also says:
"On this date in 1944, as the Allies prepared to invade France at Normandy, a minor detail in a London Daily Telegraph crossword puzzle raised considerable alarm among the military brass. During the preceding month, the puzzle had contained code words the invasion planners had been using, including Omaha, mulberry, Neptune and Utah. On June 2, overlord, the word secretly asssigned to the entire massive assault, appeared as a solution to "eleven across" from the previous day. British inteligence officers quickly arrested Leonard Dawe, a physics teacher and twenty-year veteran crossword puzzle writer for the news-paper, but they quickly determined that this was simply an amazing coincidence rather than an act of espionage."
pitchkettled
meaning puzzled. I have no idea why, but I like it.
It also says:
"On this date in 1944, as the Allies prepared to invade France at Normandy, a minor detail in a London Daily Telegraph crossword puzzle raised considerable alarm among the military brass. During the preceding month, the puzzle had contained code words the invasion planners had been using, including Omaha, mulberry, Neptune and Utah. On June 2, overlord, the word secretly asssigned to the entire massive assault, appeared as a solution to "eleven across" from the previous day. British inteligence officers quickly arrested Leonard Dawe, a physics teacher and twenty-year veteran crossword puzzle writer for the news-paper, but they quickly determined that this was simply an amazing coincidence rather than an act of espionage."
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I've read that. Didn't remember it, though.
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In short, tell me more!
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(Who Needs Sleep (http://www.fishertowne.com/Barenaked/Lyrics/Lyrics.cfm?Album_Id=5&Lyric_Id=50) by the Barenaked Ladies.)
I believe there are people with forms of insomnia who rest but never really sleep, though. I'm sure the Barenaked Ladies wouldn't lie to me.
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'cos you're a purveyor of the bizarre.
That was easy.
As opposed to a perveyor of a bazaar, of course. Which probably involves selling hobbits.
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It's a strange and unusual word, of course I like it.
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Which is a thoroughly unhelpful explanation.
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Unless you were wearing your heatproof suit. In which case, I think everybody else would probably have the right to be puzzled. But not really because of the sailor and his pitch.