Delightful discovery – through ResearchBuzz – an online dicitonary which gives definitions as limericks.
Not all of them are amusing – as this one for ‘assistance’
“Where is the assistance? There’s naught!”
Cried a man whose whole fam’ly was caught
In tsunami waves vast
Cataclysmic! too fast
To flee tragedy nature had wrought.
Author : Jane Auerbach, submitted: 05 Feb 2005 – The first words of this quote came from a 28-year-old Indonesian, immediately following the terrible disaster that befell South Asia on December 26, 2004. Despite a massive outpouring of foreign aid, the tsunami destroyed so much local infrastructure that assistance could not quickly reach all who needed it.
But they are all super interesting, and some brilliant – read this one for ‘additive inverse’
Consider a negative 3.
How useful in math can it be?
In addition it will
Make a 3 become nil.
It’s an additive inverse, you see.
Author : Chris Doyle, submitted: 07 May 2005
And you can join the project… Read about it here
Thanks. Very interesting.
All I can do is offer my favourite limericks to the project.
1) (this is by Gilbert of Gilbert & Sullivan)
There was an old man of St Bees
Who was horribly stung by a wasp.
When they said: “Does it hurt?â€
He replied: “No, it doesn’t—
It’s a good job it wasn’t a hornet!â€
2) (Short limericks)
There was a poet from Timbuctoo,
Whose poems ended at line two.
There was a poet called Dunn.
[And there’s the unwritten one about a poet called Nero]
hey, you can join the project – why dont’ you – they have just finished the Aa’s and have started with the Ba’s – clearly they have a long way to go!
I am writing to you from Simon & Schuster, to offer you review copies of two wonderful works on Indian Literature that we will be publishing this Fall.
Q&A by Vikas Swarup is the story of how an illiterate waiter from Mumbai wins the one billion rupee jackpot in the Indian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? and is promptly arrested for cheating. The novel unfolds as he reviews the videotapes with his lawyer, telling her how, growing up an orphan boy, he came by the crucial wisdom and trivia that enabled him to sail through the quiz show without a single pass. It reads a little like a fable, is rigourously logical, and gives us a dark and witty picture of humanity in all its guises
A bestseller in India, Untouchables is Narendra Jadhav’s memoir which tells the deeply moving story of his father, who was born an untouchable, and his incredible journey to freedom. This is not only a personal memoir but an important social chronicle of the revolution of India’s Dalit class, “the untouchables.”
Please contact me and I would be happy to send you a copy of each book for your review.
Best,
Kristen Giorgio
Marketing Manager, Scribner & Touchstone/Fireside
Phone 212-698-7161
Kristen.Giorgio@simonandschuster.com
Kristen, thank you for writing in. I have emailed you on this.
Charukesi