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I Heart the Reverse Dictionary

by missy 5/14/2008 2:14:00 PM
Got a case of tip-of-your-tongue syndrome? The Reverse Dictionary might be an effective remedy, allowing you to describe a concept and get results about it. Let's say you're telling someone about the penalty Tomas Holmstrom got in the Stanley Cup playoff game the other night for interfering in the ... the ... you know, that part of the ice right in front of the goal. Reverse Dictionary to the rescue: entering "hockey goalie area" nets me (pun fully intended) the word "crease" and 100 other related terms that I can browse.

For your academic work, there are other tools the library offers that can help with this kind of thing, too: a thesaurus (Roget's and lots of other options at R. 423.1), a visual dictionary (R. 423.1 M167C1992), a thematic dictionary (Descriptionary, LPC R. 423.1 M133D), or a reference e-book collection like Credo for more substantial research.

But when you're trying to think of a term that you might not have dropped into casual usage since that philosophy class two years ago, it's nice to type in "German worldview" and be pointed to multiple definitions of "weltanschauung". And while I can neither confirm nor deny that it may be useful for crossword puzzles (a seven-letter word for hungry: p??ki?h) and Scrabulous, this may be a tip you want to keep to yourself.

Thursday Readings: Pedal (Loop) vs. Metal (LPC)

by missy 4/14/2008 2:35:00 PM

If CTA construction is getting you down, stop by the Barnes & Noble DePaul Center this Thursday, April 17, at 5:30 to find out how you can become your own alternative transportation. J. Harry Wray, professor of political science at DePaul, will discuss and sign his new book "Pedal Power: The Quiet Rise of the Bicycle in American Public Life" (LPC 388.34720973 W943p2008), which grew out of the Discover Chicago course he's taught for several years. Wray shows how "politics, economics, and the environment combine to affect culture and be affected by it," and how a bike seat can be the best place to experience that.

Then, if you ride north fast enough, you'll be in time for Steve Almond's reading here at 7 pm in room 300 of Richardson Library. Almond first gained attention with the story collection "My Life in Heavy Metal." He followed that up with "Candyfreak: A Journey through the Chocolate Underbelly of America" (LPC 338.47664153 A452c2004) and a co-authored novel with confessional narrators alternating by chapter. His newest offering is "(Not That You Asked): Rants, Exploits, and Obsessions," a collection of essays with "biting humor, honesty, smarts and heart," according to Kirkus Reviews.


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