[identity profile] theidolhands.livejournal.com
ik·suar·pok [ick-swaɹ-pock]:
origin: Inuit; ᐃᒃᑦᓱᐊᕐᐳᒃ.



noun
Sort of like constantly refreshing your browser to check for the arrival of an email or a dog checking out every single person who leaves a store to see if that's their person -- a specific excitement, creating a pleasantly nervous anxiety; anticipation that causes one to repeatedly check/confirm/seek.

He/She/It's coming! Are they here yet? Are they here yet?!

Considering the origin of the word, I suppose it would be hard for someone to see a white igloo, on white snow, possibly in a snowstorm. So, checking in the Arctic may be practical as well as frenetic!
[identity profile] theidolhands.livejournal.com
bun·yip [ˈbuhn-ˈyip]:
origin: [1850] Wemba-Wemba language bunyip= "evil spirit" or "devil"

noun
Myth or cryptid? The mystery remains. This creature is also called a "kianpraty". The big foot of the swamp, a creature with various appearances on record, but usually something close to a gorilla mixed with a dog or bear; nocturnal, preys on livestock & humans by lurking at the water's edge like an alligator.

Heavily reported in the past, particularly in Australia, and said to let out a cry before beginning its hunt that scared aborigines away on such nights. Some wonder if it may be a real life creature such as a hippopotamus, walrus, seals, manatee, etc. that was lesser known then and mistaken for some frightening beast. However, that wouldn't account for many reports of it raising on hind legs reaching 10-13 feet.

Interestingly enough, some fossilized bones were found by George Rankin in the Wellington Caves, and it was not any currently known animals. The natives said that the now-labeled Diprodoton -- see image below -- was a "bunyip"; an animal thought to be long extinct, somewhat resembling a rhino or primitive bear (as it's commonly described as hairy). It's been said that the sound aborigines heard was a koala cry, which is what the prehistoric Diprodoton coincidentally resembles.

Bunyip can also mean impostor, or something pretending to be something it isn't -- coined in 1890 by the upper class to describe Australians striving to rise into their aristocracy.


adjective
Something that is a forgery or fake, like a "bunyip document".



Looks like a giant koala bear to me.


[identity profile] trellia-chan.livejournal.com
ulu (Plural: uluit)

Noun:  An ulu is a half-moon shaped knife traditionally used by the women of the Yup'ik, Inuit, and other native tribes of the far north. It is extremely versatile and is used for a wide variety of tasks such as carving meat, skinning animals, scraping and cleaning hides, cutting blocks of ice, or even trimming human hair.  It has been traced as early as 2500 BC.  Originally, the blade was contructed from slate and the handle from bone, tusk, or antler.  These days, the blade is usually made of steel, though the handle is often still made from the traditional materials.

[identity profile] trellia-chan.livejournal.com

saguaro: [suh-gwahr-oh, suh-wahr-oh] (the latter pronunciation in Spanish)

Noun:

The saguaro  (Carnegiea gigantea) is a species of cactus that is only found in the Sonoran dessert of the American Southwest and Mexico.  It can grow to be as tall as fifty to seventy feet and weigh as much as six tons, and live to be 150-200 years old, though scientists suspect that the largest ones could be much older.  It doesn't reach sexual maturity until 35 years of age!

I heard this story about a saguaro in Arizona the other day.  A gentleman had just recently moved from Chicago to Phoenix and purchased his new house because of the ancient saguaro growing in the front yard, but the storms that came through a few days ago knocked it over.  It would cost $40,000 for him to replace the cactus with one that was even half its size and age!

Etymology: 1855-1860.  The word entered the English language by way of the Mexican-Spanish language.  It ultimately originates from a Native American name of unknown meaning and origin, possibly from an extinct Uto-Aztecan language of Sonora.


[identity profile] theidolhands.livejournal.com
kun·lan·ge·ta [ko͞oˈlänˌɡlät]:
origin: [1976; recorded] Jane M. Murphy, Harvard University study; Yupik language of northwest Alaskan Inuit.

nouns
The Inuit/Eskimo word for "psychopath".

Explained as, “a person whose mind knows what to do but he does not do it.”

This person is also known as never improving, no matter how many times the elders talk to them -- irremediable, their motives remain selfish regardless of who or what is harmed.

It is also reputed therefore, that even in a famously peaceful society, but one even more reliant on one another for survival than our own, that when asked what is done with such an individual, the answer was, "Somebody would have pushed him off the ice when nobody else was looking.”

Problem solved.
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