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[Dixonary] 3037 SITH results
Hi all!
Please forgive my tardiness. When the deadline came, I was knee deep in Buena Noche preparations, and if you're not familiar with Buena Noche, it tends to stay busy up until (and past) midnight. Despite listing times in UTC, I live in Oregon, so . . . Here are your results for round 3037 for the word SITH. I combined the definitions from Cunningham and Merriam-Webster due to their similarity, which, for my second deal in a row, was nearly word-for-word. (I did not check with Cunningham if this was intended to be a DQ, as if it were not, it would automatically become an unintended DQ. Cunningham's vote confirmed this to be a good gamble.) Because only 2 voters did not vote for the combined definition, including Cunningham, we get to share a rare combined Natural 9 and D9, making Cunningham Da Winnah and me a rather astonished dealer. Of course, the real winners are Mallach and Widdis, who each scored an aberrant 5. Should Cunningham be unable to deal, Mallach is highest in rolling scores. Now, for our tabulation: 1. a brimless cap. — defined by Stevens, who voted for 5 & 7, scoring an aberrant 4. Votes from Embler & Widdis. 2. easily procured. [Not used.] — defined by Widdis, who voted for 1 & 7, scoring an aberrant 5. Votes from Abell, Evans, & Madnick. 3. the eighth chakra in the Buddhist meditation system, corresponding to the moment just before achievement of nirvana. — defined by Shefler, who voted for 5 & 7, scoring an aberrant 4. Votes from Mallach & Shepherdson. 4. a group of ornamental ponds arranged in a formal design. — defined by Naylor, who voted for 5 & 6, scoring a natural 1. Vote from Cunningham. 5. [Bot.] in a flower, the point at which the anther attaches to the filament. — defined by Mallach, who voted for 3 & 7, scoring an aberrant 5. Votes from Naylor, Shefler, & Stevens. 6. a name for plants of the genus Nigella - especially N sativa; sometimes applied to the corncockle Agrostemma githago. — defined by Barrs, who was DQ, scoring a natural 2. Votes from Cunningham & Naylor. 7. [rare] variant of since. — defined by Cunningham & Merriam-Webster, who voted for 4 & 6, scoring a natural 9. Votes from Abell, Embler, Evans, Madnick, Mallach, Shefler, Shepherdson, Stephens, & Widdis. Lodge, who was DQ, defined sith as, [Obs.] immediately; without delay. It was read by Google's filters to be some sort of promotional email, which scores Lodge 2 Dealer Points. Those who did not submit a definition all voted for the crowd favorite, and their results are as follows: Abell voted for 2 & 7, scoring an aberrant 2. Embler voted for 1 & 7, scoring an aberrant 2. Evans voted for 2 & 7, scoring an aberrant 2. Madnick voted for 2 & 7, scoring an aberrant 2. Shepherdson voted for 3 & 7, scoring an aberrant 2. As you can see, everyone who participated in this round scored. I'm not sure if that's a metric Shefler tracks, but I don't recall encountering it so far in my tenure here, so it seems worth mentioning. Anyway, I'm off to wrap up some tamales and then maybe sleep. If you're the sort that celebrate today, I hope it's a good one, and I hope you get some high-quality deposits in your memory banks. Take it away, Cunningham! Rx. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Dixonary" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to dixonary+unsubscribe (AT) googlegroups (DOT) com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/di...oglegroups.com. |
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