Since 2016 Giorgio Coniglio, registered pseudonym and editor-in-chief, has been bundling collections of POETRY, WORDPLAY and PHOTOGRAPHY, grouped by topic, and seasoned with humour and parody. His sole aim is to entertain you with presentations 4 times per month. The poems have primarily been edited and approved at other online sites.The related blog "DAILY ILLUSTRATED NONSENSE" sends out items from these collections in intentionally random order one-at-a-time.
Friday, 20 December 2024
FINAL EDITORIAL NOTICE
Sunday, 15 December 2024
American Satire: CABINET CONFIRMATION
The detailed story of a flawed appointee for leadership of the US Department of Justice (DOJ), i.e. the Attorney General, is presented at OEDILF here.
Authors' Note: The particular nominee we had in mind is discussed HERE.
Bill Barr (Republican) and Merrick Garland (Democrat) were Attorneys General in the 2017 and 2021 administrations respectively.
The president, who employed her in his first term as director of the Small Business Administration, nominated her in 2024 as Secretary of Education, but has repeatedly indicated that he would like to eventually eliminate the Department.
/
Tuesday, 10 December 2024
O Canada! STAND on GUARD (D.T.)
These verses, previously languishing in incomplete form, were brought to fruition in late January 2025. We had the good fortune to find a suitable software-space to stick this assemblage, before our blog closed down at the end of 2024, so please excuse the minor anachronism involved in the posting on this early date (some of the ideas herein were only expressed after the US presidential inauguration on January 20, 2025).
CURRENT CONTENTS
Fifty-first state
Canadian bacon
Inadmissible
Dual citizenship
Honoured
Tariff terror
Authors' Note: The Canadian author regrets the unapologetic tone of this diatribe (see borrow). He does point out, however, that the verse constitutes a trio of timely diplomatic nonsense along with Panama Canal Zone and Greenland.
Authors' Note: In Canada, a longstanding rule decrees a candidate for entry (visitor or immigrant) "inadmissible" if they have a criminal record elsewhere. Over 30 other countries have such rules, although generally less harsh and better specified, dependent on length of incarceration, etc. The European Union ('Schengen-countries') will activate new regulations in mid-2025, likely more severe than previous versions. The government of Italy undertakes policing functions for the small, enclosed, but otherwise independent Vatican City.
In the US, any proposed name-change would have to be reviewed by protocols of the Board of Geographic Names.
Mount Denali, at 6190m (20,310 feet), the loftiest peak in the United States, is discussed at OEDILF by SheilaB.
As a feature left over from earlier times, when there were fewer global immigrants, the expression dual citizen, or even more curtly dual, is assumed by Canadians to imply, failing further specification, a person who holds citizenship in both the US and Canada.
The verb subdue, and its derivatives seem to derive from a different linguistic root.
Authors' Note:
Readers might also enjoy the three sets of verses collected under the rubric "Canadiana". Start by clicking HERE.
Thursday, 5 December 2024
Unprecedented doggerel: PRESIDENTIAL PALINKUs
CURRENT CONTENTS
Politics
Global warming
45th prez #1
45th prez #2
45th prez #3
45th prez #4
45th prez #5
45th prez #6
45th prez #7
Wednesday, 20 November 2024
TARGETED PALINDROMES I to K (the showcase continues)
Editors' Note: Fans of palindromes might note that a lengthy series of posts entitled "Submitted Palindromes" has disappeared from this blog. They might be delighted to disover that this change is only administrative -- the 'missing' blogposts, 59 in all, have been transferred to "Daily Illustrated Nonsense", and can be found HERE.
GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR WEB-EXPLORERS:
Friday, 15 November 2024
The Adventures of Leslie Moore, Linguist -- SUFFIXES
Authors' Note: For more than a decade, the author of this verse has routinely taken a bedtime dose of alginate, a seaweed-derived product useful as an adjunct in the treatment of gastroesophageal reflux.
"An iron fist (hand) in a velvet glove" is a well-known idiom portraying hawks who hide behind a more dove-like appearance or demeanour.
Sunday, 10 November 2024
The Impossible Dream: CAPTAIN R's RHOTIC MISSION
CURRENT CONTENTS
Quixotic Dream
Non-rhotic vs Rhotic Speech
Rhotic-Poet School
Intrusive Rs
Readers who find use of the word "rhoticity" pedantic, are advised to substitute "rotisserie".
Authors' Note:
otic: pertaining to the ear, or to hearing, as in the medical specialty oto-laryngology (ENT)
The author is pleased to explain that this verse can be read with either a rhotic or non-rhotic accent. In fact, it is highly recommended that each reader try to recite it aloud both ways.
Poor, sure, more is a trio of words often used for rhyming in poetic or song-lyric lines (a random example: I'd like to ensure / That our love will bring more). Non-rhotic speakers apparently find that these words rhyme as indicated in the phonetic renderings paw, shaw, maw. To rhotic ears, however, the partial rhyming of 'sure' and 'more' sounds as amateurish as pairing 'time' and 'fine'.
With occasional exceptions, native-born and -schooled Canadians using English are rhotic speakers, their Rs being fully sounded, even after vowels. However, we have welcomed to our shores large numbers of immigrants from around the globe who have brought their non-rhotic dialects. Their speech pattern is rendered roughly by changing all the relevant Rs to Hs, e.g. 'hard' == > 'hahd'; 'exhort == > 'exhoht'
Apparently, expert linguists have established that English was spoken only rhotically until the time of Shakespeare. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the use of non-rhotic speech, with the loss of 'post-vocalic R', spread until it became the dominant speech pattern in most of England, the Atlantic seaboard of the United States, Australia and several other English colonies.
Authors' Note:
celler (CHEH-ler): a large stringed instrument, imaginatively pronounced with an intrusive R; often accompanied by the pianeR, and, in the orchestreR, by the violeR, oboeR, tubeR, and piccoleR
Readers may have to stretch their credulity to accept that a ring of thieves would bring large musical instruments like cellos, stolen elsewhere, to be dumped on the UK market.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was satirized in the press as "Laura Norder" as she often reiterated the mantra "Law and Order", voiced with an intrusive R, as law-R an' order. This element of speech, frequently used by non-rhotic speakers of British and of southern hemisphere English, is likely the most common form of epenthesis, the adding of unrelated letters to ease pronunciation. Americans are not immune to this linguistic peculiarity, as witnessed by the 1950s books and movie about the Texan boy-and-his-dog "Old Yeller".
GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR WEB-EXPLORERS: To resume the sequence of daily titillations on our related blog "Daily Illustrated Nonsense", click HERE. Once you arrive, you can select your time-frame of interest from the calendar-based listings at the bottom of the page, and check the daily offerings for any month from the start of 2020 until December 2024. As of December 2024, there are 1800 unique entries available on the daily blog, displaying individual poems (often illustrated) and wordplay, but also with some photo-collages and parody song-lyrics. Most of their key elements are also presented here on "Edifying Nonsense" in topic-based collections, such as this one. The "Daily" format also has the advantage of including some song-lyrics, videos and other material that are not shown here on this topic-based blog.
Readers may have to stretch their credulity to accept that a ring of thieves would bring large musical instruments like cellos, stolen elsewhere, to be dumped on the UK market.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was satirized in the press as "Laura Norder" as she often reiterated the mantra "Law and Order", voiced with an intrusive R, as law-R an' order. This element of speech, frequently used by non-rhotic speakers of British and of southern hemisphere English, is likely the most common form of epenthesis, the adding of unrelated letters to ease pronunciation. Americans are not immune to this linguistic peculiarity, as witnessed by the 1950s books and movie about the Texan boy-and-his-dog "Old Yeller".