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Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Oddball Word of the Day

Truth be told, I haven’t been writing lately. My mind is discombobulated with my retail job, wedding plans, saving money to move out of my mom’s house, looking for a new career, and SNOW. While I love the pure crystal beauty of a white wonderland and the fresh crispness of icy air, the south is never prepared for winter weather this “severe.”

So yes, Monday went by without a topic. No writing means no research means no learning. Shame on me! Especially since being snowed in is ideal for catching up on said writing. I have no excuses, really.

Today’s word is…

Eleemosynary

I found this word in a thesaurus once. I had no use for it (can’t imagine who would), but it was so strange and had no identifiable root word in my vocabulary.

It means, “relating to charity, derived from charity, or dependent on charity.”

I think I’ll just use altruistic if I’m feeling daring.

According to the automatic result when I searched Google for “eleemosynary origin” –

“Late 16th century (as a noun denoting a place where alms were distributed): from medieval Latin eleemosynarius, from late Latin eleemosyna ‘alms,’ from Greek eleÄ“mosunÄ“ ‘compassion’ (see alms).”

Its meaning makes a bit more sense now that I know of its relation to alms.

If anyone can utilize it naturally in a sentence, please share. I’d love to read it.


Source:


Today’s deviant ditty:
“Sacrimony (Angel of Afterlife)” by Kamelot


Monday, February 16, 2015

Creating Character Names

Many writers tell me the hardest part is coming up with a suitable name for their character. I envy those people. Their characters are already complex personalities that just need a birth certificate to be whole.

For me, it’s the opposite. I design names based on situation and environment. I know who my character is, where they live, what makes them “special,” but I have the hardest time inventing desires (the entire basis of a plot) or quirks. They live on a hamster wheel, doing the same run on a different day.

Names, I have no problem.

Every writer needs a name book – often these will have “Baby” in the title, since the majority of everyday people only need names for that purpose. Expect an odd look from your clerk if you are a young teenager in need of this supply for your writings. I remember my first time well. I was eleven, and you can imagine.

Name books are good if you have a general idea already – you know you want a girl’s name that is Spanish and starts with the letter A. Or you want a German name that means “flower.”

Where do you turn if you want to invent a name? Not too strange to turn away your readers, but something still meaningful to your story?

I have an easy fix, which is also fun.

If you just want a fancy name, pick a name you like but doesn’t fit your character.

For example:

Amber.

Write it backwards:

Rebma.

Now, play around with the letters, transposing and changing them, until you have a new name you like.

a)      Amber
b)      Rebma
c)      Remba
d)      Remia
e)      Rymia

Rymia could a war-protesting fairy in the far-away forest of Timbriana (creating fantasy locales is easy too – I just took the word Timber in re: forests and added the typical “ia” to the end, plus “na”), or a human in college studying music (is she a hippie, a hipster, a nerd, a cheerleader?).

Just because a name is different doesn’t compel the character to be in a fantasy. This is YOUR character. If the story is solid, the name will be accepted.

If you want an invented name with meaning, either assign it a meaning (how you work this into your story is up to you – is it a flower her mother loves, the name of a river where her father met his true love?) or start with a name that already has the meaning you want.

Let’s try “Natasha” which means “born on Christmas” – perhaps you have a messiah character, or someone who is going to sacrifice herself, or someone who is obsessed with holidays and gift-giving.

a)      Natasha
b)      Ahsatan (This is not cool.)
c)      Ashatan (Okay, fixed that.)
d)     Aislaytan (Hm, Aislinn is an Irish name [sounds like Ashlyn or Ashling] that means dream or vision [works well with Christmas], so let’s combine the two.)
e)      Ashlayton (I’d rather spell it out than have people mispronounce it. You may feel differently, and that’s okay! It’s your character, after all.)
f)       Asali (Personally, I like the A-S-L sound, but not the "ton" at the end.)
g)      Asaldi (Almost sounds neutral – could be a boy’s name as well. Reminds me of Vivaldi.)

I’m stopping there because I like Asaldi. But any of the variations after the original backward-spelling can be used if you like how it sounds. You can also keep going. But see how different Asaldi is from Natasha? And because it’s new, the meaning of the original name can be kept if you want it that way.

Also, don’t be bashful picking from mythology and history, just as parents do. Maybe the character’s mother is obsessed with orchestral music and likes Antonio Vivaldi in particular. Perhaps she thought Vivaldi would be a nice name for a daughter. You get backstory, too, when you do it this way.

Today’s deviant ditty:
“Lost” by Arion






Monday, February 2, 2015

Vintage Word of the Day

It’s not that I have no topic today, but I have very little time to write this morning. Shopping plans have piled themselves upon me.

I found this word in my page-a-day desk calendar of “forgotten words” – mostly from the 17th to 19th centuries. It’s the only one I’ve been able to remember because it’s the only one I’d use.

The word is elucubrate.

According to Sir James Murray’s New English Dictionary of 1901, it means, “to produce a literary work by expenditure of ‘midnight oil.’ Formed of Latin elucubrare, to compose by lamplight.”

In today's context: "to pull an all-nighter" as one would do studying for an exam.

I like Henry Cockeram’s definition better. In his Interpreter of Hard English Words (1623), it means simply, “to do a thing by candlelight.”

I yearn to do this often during the cold winter months, but I end up going straight to bed when I come home from work at night. And candles just aren’t as romantic when the sun is shining.

I did write by candlelight once, when I was 14 (it was a Pirates of the Caribbean fanfiction about Davy Jones’s lost daughter – I never finished it) during a thunderstorm at dusk. It was wonderful.

I don’t know why I don’t do it again. Probably because it only feels proper if I’m writing on paper. I write better and faster when I’m typing; not to mention computer light cancels out candle glow.

Still, I should do it again.


Today’s deviant ditty:
“To Kill a King” by Hungry Lucy