The other day I heard one of our nurse's aides use the word "parsimonious" correctly in a sentence and I was stopped in my tracks.
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And we miss you here and on Twitter. Hope you come to the meet up in October at Blog World Expo. Bongi, Sid, maybe Vijay, Rob, Val, etc will be there. Would love to see you.
Posted by: rlbates | July 06, 2009 at 05:13 AM
Do you remeber how it was used?
Posted by: James | July 06, 2009 at 07:32 AM
In reference to the free employee lunch given by the hospital for those of us working on Independence Day. I commented on how good the lunch looked (fried chicken, macaroni salad, corn on the cob), and the aide said: "But they're being very parsimonious with the portions." I loved it.
Posted by: Theresa | July 06, 2009 at 09:31 PM
You have educated nurse's aides......probably the result of poor employment opportunities in rural and that college up the road.
Posted by: pat | July 07, 2009 at 12:57 PM
As an ex-English teacher something such as you describe always gives me a huge kick. A while back your little bro added egregious to his everyday vocab. It makes me smile.
Posted by: Gillian Chan | July 08, 2009 at 04:59 AM
Excellent! I am often accused of using BIG words that no-one understands; I guess that's a result of reading posh literature (shock horror - do folk still do that??!!Jane Austen and Shakespeare are too little appreciated).
At school, we used to have competitions to see who could find the most interesting word in the dictionary. I still love doing that with my kids, although kids' dictionaries don't have treasures like nihilipilification. Mind you, our dictionary didn't have google or internet in either ... ;)
Posted by: Jabulani | July 10, 2009 at 04:42 AM