Главная страница «Первого сентября»Главная страница журнала «Английский язык»Содержание №4/2009

Jazz Up Your Lesson

continued from No. 3

ALL KINDS OF PEOPLE

Want to know more and more precise names for people around you?

Then let’s play a guessing game!
Here you will find lots of different names for various categories of people.
Try to guess who these people might possibly be by amusing storylets.
Then check your guess with the help of the glossary.

Tony preached at the neighbourhood church for three months before he was ejected through its tall oaken doors, once the congregation discovered he was a theologaster and a pseudapostle.

Tom admitted he was a cartomaniac; it was for this very reason that he insisted the glove compartment should be his domain, and only his. But Vivian – who was an avid deltiologist – always annoyed him on road trips by filling it with the fruits of her own enthusiasm.

Pete was a philocalist, so he found the delectable Silvia irresistible. He even stifled his misocapnist bent in order to pass out cigars to his friends after she had agreed to marry him.

Sam was a quidnunc. Pamela was a scuttlebutthead. They never lacked for conversation.

Sylvester was highly regarded as a sarcast, and he was always the hit at company parties. But he could not seem to make an impression on Tobias, his boss, even when the rest of his department was choking with laughter. Tobias was such an agelast!

“Oh, Timothy, you are such a cogger. I have only just met you, but I do not believe one word out of your mouth,” mewed Susie.

“Why, Sue, honey, do not say that!” protested the debonair Timothy. “I admit I am a philoxenist, but you can trust me!”

Violet had been an arctophilist and a plangonologist for so many years that her husband suggested she open a store to sell off her collections. He so wanted the spare bedroom to be available for his visiting parents, and as it was, one could barely fit through the door. Violet told him she could not part with any of them: they were all she wanted as a child and to let them go now would simply be so sad.

Young Sue was unhappy about her Wednesday afternoon schedule. Sue had to get ready for piano lesson on Thursday – but she was such a misdoctakleidist! – and she had an algebra exam on Friday – something she did not think any misomath, like herself, should have to go through.

Clement had become such an extreme luddite that he had smashed his neighbour’s computer. Now he was an analysand (the court’s doing), which did not seem to be helping much, but at least it got him out of the house for an hour each week.

Beatrice drove everyone in the library crazy. She was a siffleuse, and did not seem to know when to stop. She did apologize, once Bella – exercising her duties as a silentiary – pointed out to her how disruptive she was.

As an alopecist, Austin wanted nothing more than to fix his father’s hairstyle. He was horrified to hear friends call Austin a swoophead.

Dave was a mashaller at the Sydney airport. His mother, who lived in New York City, liked to call him “my adorable, antiscian with arching arms!”

Deborah was thrilled to get a job as a famulus to Professor George, the famous shaconian. She hoped to help him prove his unpopular position to the rigid Shakespeare lovers who dominated the English department.

Alfred the wowser was always telling those around him how they should behave. Ben did not like it; he called Alfred a microlipet, making mountains of molehills when he really should just let people be.

“Chris! You can either accept that job as a nacket at the tennis club, or you can spend your summer as a screever on the streets of the city, but I’m through giving you handouts when you do not do anything around here!” yelled his father.

Daniel was a polyphage; all the waitresses in town knew him on a first-name basis and looked forward to his big tips. He loved beer, too, but few people knew he was a labeorphilist. His scrapbooks were kept in a locked cabinet.

GLOSSARY:

agelast

a person who never laughs

alopecist

a person who claims to prevent or cure baldness

analysand

a person in psychoanalysis; the patient of a psychiatrist

antiscian

a person who lives on the opposite side of the earth from you

arctophilist

a collector of teddy bears

cogger

a false flatterer, a charming trickster. Historically, a “cogger” was a person adept at “cogging the dice”, cheating at dice-throwing games. It later came to mean someone who offers compliments to mask a deception

cartomaniac

a map collector

deltiologist

a picture postcard collector

famulus

an assistant to a scholar or magician

labeorphilist

a collector of beer bottle labels

luddite

someone fanatically opposed to technological innovation, especially to any machine or labor-saving device perceived to replace workers

marshaler

a person who signals with batons to direct taxiing airplanes

microlipet

someone who gets all worked up about trivial things

misdoctakleidist   

someone who hates practicing the piano

misocapnist

a person who hates smoking or the smell of tobacco smoke

misomath

one who detests mathematics or science

nacket

a person who picks up stray balls during a tennis match

philocalist

a lover of beauty

philoxenist

a person who loves to entertain strangers

plangonologist

a collector of dolls

polyphage

a person who eats all kinds of food, especially in great quantities

pseudapostle

a person who falsely claims to be an apostle

quidnunc

someone who always wants to know what is going on (from Latin: “quid nunc” which means “what now?”

sarcast

a person with a quick, cutting wit; an expert in sarcasm

screever

a person who draws pictures or scrawls begging messages on the sidewalk to elicit money from passerby

scuttlebutthead   

a person whose chief pleasure in life is being the first to tell everyone the latest news, whether it is a breaking story in the media or a broken heart in the office

shaconian

a person who believes that Sir Francis Bacon was the author of Shakespeare’s works

siffleuse

a female professional whistler (the term for a man in this profession is “siffleur”)

silentiary

a person whose job is to keep people quiet; also, one who has taken a vow of silence

swoophead

a balding man who lets the hair on one side of his head grow long and then swoops it over the top of his head in an attempt to cover his bald spot

theologaster

a religious quack or phony

wowser

Puritanical, self-righteous snob

to be continued

By Alyona Pavlova ,
Moscow State University of Printing Arts