I'm thinking of a word that rhymes with "umpteen."

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I'm thinking of a word that rhymes with "umpteen."

Dit onderwerp is gemarkeerd als "slapend"—het laatste bericht is van meer dan 90 dagen geleden. Je kan het activeren door een een bericht toe te voegen.

1Jim53
dec 14, 2013, 8:51 pm

Because I've got so many reasons to be grateful this year. Only the last syllable rhymes.

2oldstick
dec 15, 2013, 5:59 am

Absolutely perfect!

3Jenni_Canuck
dec 15, 2013, 11:21 am

You rascal!

4defaults
Bewerkt: dec 15, 2013, 12:35 pm

It would be cool to be a filter feeder. I'd dive around with my kisser wide open and catch stuff in my mouth parts. No more worrying about how to hold a fork properly.

5Jim53
dec 15, 2013, 12:48 pm

Crambo is not pristine. He's having trouble coming up with a rhyming word for rascal, but will persevere and return.

6Jim53
dec 15, 2013, 1:06 pm

whoops, missed #4. No cetaceans here.

Not pristine, baleen,

7louminus
dec 16, 2013, 10:22 am

Thanks to gender issues, I missed my sweet _______ party.

8Jenni_Canuck
dec 16, 2013, 10:33 am

>3 Jenni_Canuck:/5 It was a favoured epithet of my Irish grandmother who, when we misbehaved, would holler at us “You young so-an-so!”

9defaults
dec 16, 2013, 11:09 am

Paris had an internal organ
Its bile was black as balls
Baudelaire had rhymes like dimes
But so have toilet walls

10Jim53
dec 16, 2013, 3:19 pm

Lou, Crambo is neither sixteen nor any other teen.

Jenni, I guess given the context, she wasn't calling you "mavourneen," or even "colleen." I'm still stumped but still trying.

defaults, I love the poem. I remember having a few pages of quotes from Chuck B back in high school and thinking they were pretty cool.

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen,

11louminus
dec 16, 2013, 5:46 pm

I was served soup in a bowl, but ended up eating the whole thing.

12Jim53
dec 16, 2013, 7:21 pm

Plop, plop, fizz fizz. Crambo is sympathetic.but no winner.

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen, tureen,

13oldstick
dec 17, 2013, 7:16 am

There's one on either side of me.

14Jim53
dec 17, 2013, 8:55 am

#13 I thought of various amusing possibilities for the things that might be on either side, then it occurred to me that whether you were playing two tambourines or surrounded by teen queens on trampolines, you were in between. Was that the idea?

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen, tureen, between,

15rolandperkins
Bewerkt: dec 19, 2013, 3:48 pm

__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __s were supposed to have joined
the "Dearly Loved &
Departed", be they weekly, monthly or yearly,
By the year 2000, pundits
were assuring us ca. 1995. It's
Strange,to see some of them still alive
In the year 2013. "Mere jive",
One may say of the pundits'
forecast;
We still don't know if __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __s will last.

16oldstick
dec 18, 2013, 9:34 am

There's a wild pack animal that I've never seen that might fit ( yes, I did mean between)

17defaults
dec 18, 2013, 12:35 pm

I'm not sure what it is but Massive Attack named an album after it.

18Jim53
dec 18, 2013, 3:41 pm

Roland, are you thinking of magazines? Crambo is not subscribed.
Julie, I'm drawing a blank. You haven't left the final a off of hyena, have you?
defaults, Crambo prefers to sit on the main floor.

Jenni, I still haven't figured out #3 but don't let that stop you form more guessing.

HINT: Crambo's word is the singular form of a noun that you might have seen only in the plural.

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen, tureen, between, magazine, mezzanine,

19Jim53
dec 19, 2013, 10:16 am

After today I'll be computer-less for a week or so, so I'll add another hint: Crambo's word begins with the name of a wooden leg.

20rolandperkins
dec 19, 2013, 3:45 pm

"...are you thinking of magazines?" (15, 19)

Yes "magazine" was the guess -- and thinking about the doubtful forecasts about them some 2 decades ago. Newsweek
and U.S. News have gone, as expected. Time and The Economist survive.

21rolandperkins
dec 19, 2013, 3:52 pm

I was going to guess "jean"
(singular of "jeans"(?),
but the hint "begins with the name of
a wooden leg" shot that one down.
Ditto for "paparazzO" (singular of "paparazzI",very seldom seen in the singular),
but on the rhyming -- not a prayer.

22Jim53
dec 19, 2013, 4:49 pm

I watched Mary Poppins last night.

23Jim53
dec 19, 2013, 9:05 pm

I'll be back online in a week or so. If anyone wants to have a new game during that time, feel free. I'll look here for more guesses when I'm back. Best wishes to all for a wonderful holiday!

(BTW, #22 was not a random note; it is related to #19.)

24oldstick
Bewerkt: dec 20, 2013, 9:32 am

My last guess was'wolverine' but it obviously wasn't correct.

25Jenni_Canuck
dec 20, 2013, 10:53 am

// #23 I'm off too for a week. Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, Season's Greetings, Happy Holidays, etc.

See you next year, you young spalpeen! ///

26oldstick
Bewerkt: dec 23, 2013, 6:53 am

While I remember it' invisible' - but the clue about a wooden leg has left me dumbfounded!

27Jim53
dec 26, 2013, 7:24 pm

Spalpeen! That's an entirely new one for me. Thanks, Jenni!

Julie, sorry I couldn't come up with wolverine. Duh. Maybe as an old Buckeye I've got them blocked out of my mind. Such denseness is virtually unseen in these parts!

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen, tureen, between, magazine, mezzanine, spalpeen, wolverine, seen, unseen,

28rolandperkins
dec 27, 2013, 12:32 am

My first is short for "uncle", and
My second's of "thin" a near
Synonym. Altogether, I'm a clear
Case of 'Unwashed". Understand?

29Jim53
dec 31, 2013, 12:47 pm

Not unclean. Crambo's word has three syllables.

30jbbarret
Bewerkt: dec 31, 2013, 4:10 pm

Dit bericht is door zijn auteur gewist.

31rolandperkins
Bewerkt: jan 1, 2014, 2:01 am

My h.s. French teacher, (I'm allowing for possible errings
Of accuracy), said that herrings
Are what is sold to the public
under the name
"__ __ __ __ __ __ __ s" (and she was USUALLY right), so is her claim
Viable, or should we look for anoth-
-er explanation? I'm loth,
In this situation (it's kind of fish-
Y ) to say that she was right I do or don't wish.

32rolandperkins
Bewerkt: jan 2, 2014, 7:23 am

"__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __" might be tri-
Syllabic, if a 2nd vowel were slurred
Over. (It has just now occurred
To me that "sardines" (31) was an ill-
Advised guess, being a bi-syll-
able.) Anyway, "__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __" denotes
"Like the hardest substance".
Votes
In my favor would be wel-
Comed; or else just say, "Hell,
It's tetrasyllablic, slur or
No slur!"
Okay, whatever you say, sir.

33oldstick
jan 2, 2014, 11:02 am

Two Guesses: one - a floor, two - an orange fruit. I did have another guess when I was in bed last night but couldn't be bothered to write it down and now it's gone! Ahh, the trials of old age!

34Jim53
jan 2, 2014, 12:43 pm

Roland, you're right that sardine is short on syllables, and I'm afraid diamantine, while a wonderful word, is long.

Julie, it's neither tangerine nor nectarine. I haven't come up with the name of one of those vinyl or linoleum substances; before I rack my rains further, is that what you meant by floor? My sympathy on memory issues. I've been reading lately that they're helped more by exercise than by playing mental games, so to play it safe I'm walking as well as playing bridge this year.

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen, tureen, between, magazine, mezzanine, spalpeen, wolverine, seen, unseen, unclean, sardine, diamantine, nectarine, tangerine,

35rolandperkins
Bewerkt: jan 2, 2014, 2:51 pm

"diamantine" (an adjective that is new* to me) wasn't the guess of 32, but it sure was close.
My guess was a tetra(?)syllable that, but for one vowel, is an anagram of "diamantine", and has almost the same meaning as a metaphorically used "diamantine".

*Come to think of it perhaps I was thinking
in Greek -- of an Aeschylean phrase:
"__ __ __ mantinon desmon in arrhektais pedais" / ...in the unbreakable bonds of
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ chains"--
and the cognate word doesn't exist in English.
(Might as well sound erudite, even in my
errors, if any!)

36Jim53
jan 2, 2014, 3:25 pm

Aha, were you thinking of adamantine? Not that either.

37rolandperkins
jan 2, 2014, 3:44 pm

"...thinking of 'admantine' "...
Yes.

38rolandperkins
Bewerkt: jan 2, 2014, 3:49 pm

That "-ine" suffix* again!
And you can use it when
You speak of something slith-
-ering and reptilian with
no breaking of the three-
syllable rule/hint. See?

*This time, as in
"__ __ __ __ __ __ __ i n e."

39Jim53
jan 3, 2014, 4:08 pm

I actually thought about using "serpentine" but I was afraid too few people would be familiar with it. I suspect most people have heard Crambo's word, possibly in a television cartoon. Review of the hints:

rhymes with "umpteen"
three syllables
singular form of a noun that you probably see more frequently in the plural form
first syllable is the name of a wooden leg mentioned in a joke in the movie Mary Poppins.

(BTW, I gave my sisters and brother-in-law these clues when I saw them over the break and they all blurted out Crambo's word immediately. Not sure what that might mean about my family.)

And a final new hint: Crambo's word does not end with "ine."

If we don't get it soon, we might need to blow this game up and let someone start a new one.

Not pristine, baleen, sixteen, *teen, spleen, tureen, between, magazine, mezzanine, spalpeen, wolverine, seen, unseen, unclean, sardine, diamantine, nectarine, tangerine, adamantine, serpentine,

40jbbarret
jan 3, 2014, 6:53 pm

Would we hear it in the "jingle jangle morning" ?

41rolandperkins
Bewerkt: jan 3, 2014, 9:01 pm

".. .most people have heard Crambo's word, possibly
in a television cartoon

Amlost rules out my guess of
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __, which
I've never seen/heard outside the covers
of a Victorian novel:
But since you never know what a
cartoon might pick up,
I'll guess it: what a British Victorian
lady might wear on a festive occasion.

42rodneyvc
jan 4, 2014, 2:39 am

I'd volunteer Yosemite Sam if I had time to host a Crambo round, but I don't, so I won't!

43oldstick
Bewerkt: jan 4, 2014, 6:59 am

Got it! Bits and pieces ( only one) There was a question on Pointless last night where they had to find a word ending in 'ail' and the contestant said 'entrail.' It was judged to be nonexistent. I would venture that your word probably only exists in the plural, too! Am I right?

44rolandperkins
jan 4, 2014, 8:19 am

"(the Crambo! word probably exists only in the
plural . . ." (43)

I can't think of a possible ending for an English plural
that would rhyme with (the 2nd syllable of). Possibly an Arabic-derived ending ("mujahadeen", though, has one syllable too many).
"umpteen". The ending: "-i"
or "-ae" would require ignoring the "-n".

45jbbarret
jan 4, 2014, 8:55 am

I suppose thirteen to nineteen only exist in the plural.

46Jim53
jan 4, 2014, 4:07 pm

#40 wonderful reference, but I won't come following today.

#41 sorry, no idea, but not Crambo's word.

#43 Showing real guts with that anecdote ;-) Crambo's word is in the dictionary in the singular, but as I noted, we've all seen it primarily in the plural. As Rodney noted, one common usage is, "Varmint, I'm going to blow you to smithereens!" Well done, and over to you, Julie!

47oldstick
Bewerkt: jan 5, 2014, 6:49 am

OK, Jim. I'll start a new thread.Here?

48oldstick
jan 5, 2014, 6:54 am

Don't know where my last message went but I've started a new one.

49rodneyvc
Bewerkt: jan 5, 2014, 7:19 am

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