27 Jul
Rudyard Kipling’s poem, “If”, brandishes Kipling’s own bold definition of manhood. The poem is a powerful and strident call upon the human soul. Men and women have been stirred by it’s uncompromising standard.
Through history many Britons were inspired by Kipling’s clarion call to unswerving manhood. It is suggested that the poem, written in the early [...]
Filed under: Manhood, Parenting, Poetry & Prose — Chris Field @ 9:28 am
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08 Jul
Here’s a royal theme to give us an excuse to play with some words. I am sure the pedants out there can explain whether “queen” is both singular and plural. I haven’t bothered to dig too deep on that one, but I have a suspicion that the plural of queen can be both ‘queen’ and [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose, Womanhood — Chris Field @ 9:07 am
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05 Jul
I’m starting a series of posts which I am titling “Little One”. They are attempts to put in words the thinking that goes with effective parenting. People absorb things by many and varied means and so I need to find diverse ways to help parents get an effective grip on their life calling.
Little One is [...]
Filed under: Family, Parenting, Poetry & Prose — Chris Field @ 9:22 am
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19 Jun
Have I worn you out yet? There’s more! Or should I say, “Here’s More!”
The objective of the game is to decode the verbage and recast it into a selection of your own making – so we end up staring at some vocab we’ve hardly seen before. And it’s all about my favourite 2 R’s – [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose — Chris Field @ 9:03 am
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13 Jun
As if ‘one’ wasn’t enough, here we go again with another dose of Logophile Lunacy.
The object of the game is for you to crack the sentence, decipher the basic message and re-compose some syllables that say the same thing, but expose us to vocab we may not regularly use.
So, have a go. You’ll have to [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose — Chris Field @ 9:02 am
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08 Jun
The easiest way to add new words and meanings to your vocabulary is to use them and to repeat them over and over again. These keys are the Extra Two R’s I have mentioned before – Repetition and Recall.
So, to pump a few extra words into your head I’ve compiled a little bit of Logophile [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose — Chris Field @ 9:08 am
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06 Jun
If I labelled this post as ‘incarnation’ you probably would have skipped over it, but if I aimed at your stomach there’s a higher chance you’ll give this post a look – so “I got you!”
I’m doing another word thing, so I put Logophiles in the title line. Let me lead you through a review [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose — Chris Field @ 9:47 am
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28 May
Which substance is behind the word aplomb?
You may hear tell of someone who displays much aplomb. You may, as I always did, associate that with someone who spoke with a plum in their mouth. The notion of determined correctness could come to my mind. A person with aplomb was always imagined by me as being [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose, Topical — Webmaster @ 8:39 am
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27 May
Where is xenophobia normally directed?
Xenophobia, built on two Greek roots that trace back over 2,000 years, is yet a very young word dating back just 100 years or so. We all know that phobia is fear. All manner of things are deemed to be the objects of phobia (fear) today. I guess if you have [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose, Topical — Webmaster @ 8:49 am
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26 May
Where will you most easily find a maelstrom?
The word maelstrom is likely to be used today to describe a bustling office, downtown traffic or hurricane winds. Turbulence, chaos, bustle and similar notions are linked to a maelstrom.
Originally, however, way back in the mid 1500’s, it had a specific meaning which put it on the map, [...]
Filed under: Poetry & Prose, Topical — Webmaster @ 8:55 am
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