tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-416803281117127007.post8451172983291297241..comments2024-03-22T04:18:05.693-05:00Comments on notes on linguistic curiosities and oddities.: Sing!Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-416803281117127007.post-621333967129829582009-07-29T11:35:42.531-05:002009-07-29T11:35:42.531-05:00Awesome investigation! Also, something like "...Awesome investigation! Also, something like "laryngis" is a Latin genitive declension of this originally Greek word, making this especially complicated but also connecting the words a bit-- maybe "laryngis glossitis et max laryngitis" is a poetic Greek-Latin-English (a.k.a. magic!) way of rendering "Glossitis and maximum laryngitis of the throat!"<br /><br />Today's comment word is "pyrenato"-- meaning "having been birthed over a fire."Andwhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17139763512542901805noreply@blogger.com