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Melvin's  Blog

Nshima & Curry

 


LEARN A NEW WORD IN A FEMTOSECOND

Every now and then, I come across a word I wish I had
learned in college, because I would have used it many times.
"Callipygian" is one such word. It means "having shapely
buttocks" and if you've never been called "callipygian,"
trust me, it's only because you refused to go on that date
with the former Spelling Bee champion. You missed out on a
chance to receive the compliment of your life. It's
something you'd want to put on your tombstone. "Here lies
Fatima Khan: She was as callipygian as J. Lo and Beyoncé."

"Callipygian" is one of many great words in the dictionary
that only a few people use. Such words are doomed to
obscurity and perhaps extinction, partly because the younger
generation, communicating through email and text messaging,
tend to prefer short words like "u" and "r." Those may not
seem like real words to you and I, but that's probably
because, well, "u n I r old."

That's why I had mixed feelings when a reader named Robert
J. Baumann of New York City introduced me to an important
word. Robert and I, incidentally, have something in common.
On his website, he lists his favorite vacation as "anywhere
my wife is." That's my favorite vacation too -- anywhere his
wife is.

I just got into trouble with both Robert and my wife and it
happened in a femtosecond. "Femtosecond" is the word Robert
wrote to me about, hoping I would expose it to my readers,
so they can start using it in their daily conversations,
perhaps as often as they use other F-words.

A femtosecond is one billionth of one millionth of a second.
Ahmed Hassan Zewail, the Egyptian American chemist, used
femtoseconds to measure certain chemical reactions. For his
great pioneering work, Zewail won the Nobel Prize in
Chemistry in 1999, as well as the right to go through
airport security one femtosecond faster than other people
named Ahmed.

A femtosecond may seem like an inconceivably short time, but
it does have applications outside science. If you're a
married man, you know all about femtoseconds. You experience
them every day. A femtosecond is the amount of time it takes
your wife to:

---glare at you when you look at another woman at the beach.

---start giving you a lecture when you make a wrong turn.

---switch channels after accidentally landing on ESPN.

---figure out if anyone at a party is wearing the same
dress.

---decide what to buy when she receives a new credit card.

If you're a married woman, you don't need Dr. Zewail to
explain femtoseconds to you. You've already got them down
pat. A femtosecond is the amount of time it takes your
husband to:

---glance at the instructions that came with the furniture
assembly kit.

---figure out where the beer is kept at a party.

---switch channels after accidentally landing on Oprah.

---jump off the couch when you say, "I'm in the mood
tonight ..."

---groan when you add, "... for chocolate ice cream."

Femtoseconds are not just for married people, of course.
Almost everyone encounters them now and then. It takes only
a femtosecond for:

---The short line at the post office to turn into a long
line.

---Bill Gates to make a buck.

---George Foreman to eat a pizza.

---The New York cabdriver to honk when the light turns
green.

---The drunk at the bar to notice that you're definitely,
most certainly, callipygian.

 

                                                        

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