A couple kind souls have written to let me know that today’s "Word of the Day" for Sunday, 12 July at Dictionary.com was…
ineffable.
Hmmmm
Pretty Erie… er um… eerie.
A couple kind souls have written to let me know that today’s "Word of the Day" for Sunday, 12 July at Dictionary.com was…
Pretty Erie… er um… eerie.
“This blog is rather like a fusion of the Baroque ‘salon’ with its well-tuned harpsichord around which polite society gathered for entertainment and edification and, on the other hand, a Wild West “saloon” with its out-of-tune piano and swinging doors, where everyone has a gun and something to say. Nevertheless, we try to point our discussions back to what it is to be Catholic in this increasingly difficult age, to love God, and how to get to heaven.” - Fr. Z

*snort* Aren’t typo’s a beast?
What does that word even mean???
This blog is so confusing. :(
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/sarcasm
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Thanks for the note, Father! That certainly is eerie…
I’ll alert the NCCB.
I heard this word on secular TV twice in the last two weeks..I don’t know if the Church is influencing the world or this is just part of everyday speech more than the Conference of Bishops would like us to know or believe..Either way, they should sleep easy tonight…
Alert Bishop Trautman!!!!!!!!
Well, I have nothing to say regarding this.
“Ineffable, something which cannot be ‘effed’ “.
That word was used in the prayers for the ordination of a bishop which I heard in DC on Saturday.
And last Sunday’s Gospel (NAB) used the word “wrought”! (The priest didn’t feel the need to define that word for us.)
Broadsword: LOL!
My son had this word show up on his practice SAT on Saturday, too. Wouldn\’t it be great if the language in the English liturgy were so sublime that Catholic kids scored better than everyone else on the SAT verbal section?