Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-23 12:00 am

Esther Dyson

"The Internet is like alcohol in some sense. It accentuates what you would do anyway. If you want to be a loner, you can be more alone. If you want to connect, it makes it easier to connect."
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-23 12:00 am
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-23 12:00 am

Seneca

"I shall never be ashamed of citing a bad author if the line is good."
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-23 12:00 am

Sue Murphy

"Did you ever walk into a room and forget why you walked in? I think that's how dogs spend their lives."
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day ([syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed) wrote2025-04-23 01:00 am

slough

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 23, 2025 is:

slough • \SLUFF\  • verb

Slough is a formal verb used for the action of getting rid of something unwanted. It is usually used with off. Slough can also mean "to lose a dead layer of (skin)" or "to become shed or cast off."

// The editorial urges the mayor not to slough off responsibility for the errors in the report.

// The exfoliating cleanser promises to gently slough away dead skin cells.

See the entry >

Examples:

"Before she left her apartment, she gathered and washed some in a bowl. Then she drew a bath and soaked for a while, eating the figs one by one, swallowing even the hard stems. The steam and water loosened her tense muscles, and her aches started to vanish. She scrubbed herself until the dead skin sloughed off, and underneath, she was new." — Sally Wen Mao, Ninetails: Nine Tales, 2024

Did you know?

There are two verbs spelled slough in English, as well as two nouns, and both sets have different pronunciations. The first noun, referring to a swamp or a discouraged state of mind, is pronounced to rhyme with either blue or cow. Its related verb, which can mean "to plod through mud," has the same pronunciation. The second noun, pronounced to rhyme with cuff, refers to the shed skin of a snake (as well as anything else that has been cast off). Its related verb describes the action of shedding or eliminating something, just like a snake sheds its skin. This slough comes from Middle English slughe and is related to slūch, a Middle High German word meaning "snakeskin."



Organization for Transformative Works ([syndicated profile] otw_news_feed) wrote2025-04-22 07:05 pm

Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press’s Fanzines are Moving to the AO3!

Posted by therealmorticia

Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press, publishers of Star Trek: The Original Series fanzines including Spockanalia and Masiform D, are importing the zines’ fanworks to the Archive of Our Own (AO3).

In this post:

Background explanation

Spockanalia (1967-1970) was the very first all-Star Trek fanzine ever published, and Masiform D (1971-1998) was the longest running Star Trek fanzine, so Open Doors is delighted to be preserving these fanzines’ works as part of the AO3 Fanzine Scan Hosting Project (FSHP).

The fanzines to be imported are:

The purpose of the Open Doors Committee’s AO3 Fanzine Scan Hosting Project (FSHP) is to assist publishers of fanzines to incorporate the fanworks from those fanzines into the Archive of Our Own. It is extremely important to Open Doors that we work in collaboration with publishers who want to import their fanzines and that we fully credit creators, giving them as much control as possible over their fanworks. Open Doors will be working with Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press to import the fanzines listed above into separate, searchable collections on the Archive of Our Own. As part of preserving the fanzines in their entirety, all art in the fanzines will be hosted on the OTW’s servers and embedded in their own AO3 work pages.

We will begin importing works from Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press’s fanzines to the AO3 after April. However, the import may not take place for several months or even years, depending on the size and complexity of the task. Creators are always welcome to import their own works and add them to the collections in the meantime.

What does this mean for creators who had work(s) in Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press’s fanzines?

We will send an import notification to the email address we have for each creator. We’ll do our best to check for an existing copy of any works before importing. If we find a copy already on the AO3, we will add it to the collection instead of importing it. All works archived on behalf of a creator will include their name in the byline or the summary of the work.

All imported works will be set to be viewable only by logged-in AO3 users. Once you claim your works, you can make them publicly-viewable if you choose. After 30 days, all unclaimed imported works will be made visible to all visitors.

Please contact Open Doors with your creator pseud(s) and email address(es), if:

  1. You’d like us to import your works, but you need the notification sent to a different email address than the publishers have a record of.
  2. You already have an AO3 account and have imported your works already yourself.
  3. You’d like to import your works yourself (including if you don’t have an AO3 account yet).
  4. You would NOT like your works moved to the AO3, or would NOT like your works added to the fanzine collections.
  5. You are happy for us to preserve your works on the AO3, but would like us to remove your name.
  6. You have any other questions we can help you with.

Please include the name of the publisher or fanzine in the subject heading of your email. If you no longer have access to the email account the publishers have a record of, please contact Open Doors and we’ll help you out. (If you’ve posted the works elsewhere, or have an easy way to verify that they’re yours, that’s great; if not, we will work with Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press to confirm your claims.)

Please see the Open Doors website for instructions on:

If you still have questions…

If you have further questions, visit the Open Doors FAQ, or contact the Open Doors committee.

We’d also love it if fans could help us preserve the story of Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press and their fanzines on Fanlore. If you’re new to wiki editing, no worries! Check out the new visitor portal, or ask the Fanlore Gardeners for tips.

We’re excited to be able to help preserve Garlic Press and Poison Pen Press’s fanzines!

– The Open Doors team and Devra Langsam

Commenting on this post will be disabled in 14 days. If you have any questions, concerns, or comments regarding this import after that date, please contact Open Doors.

Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-22 12:00 am

Jef Mallett

"If time flies when you're having fun, it hits the afterburners when you don't think you're having enough."
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-22 12:00 am
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-22 12:00 am

Al Boliska

"Do you realize if it weren't for Edison we'd be watching TV by candlelight?"
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-22 12:00 am

Ambrose Bierce

"Acquaintance, n.: A person whom we know well enough to borrow from, but not well enough to lend to."
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day ([syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed) wrote2025-04-22 01:00 am

liaison

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 22, 2025 is:

liaison • \lee-AY-zahn\  • noun

Liaison refers to a person who helps organizations or groups work together and provide information to each other, or to a relationship that allows such interactions. Liaison can also refer to an illicit sexual relationship.

// The new position involves acting as a liaison between the police department and city schools.

// The committee has maintained close liaison with some of the former board members.

See the entry >

Examples:

“In 2019, [Jefri] Lindo found work at Bestia, the trendy downtown restaurant. ... He flourished there, working his way up to house expeditor, acting as the key liaison between the kitchen and dining room.” — Laura Tejeda, The Los Angeles Times, 27 Feb. 2025

Did you know?

If you took French in school, you might remember that liaison is the word for the phenomenon that causes a silent consonant at the end of one word to sound like it begins the next word when that word begins with a vowel, so that a phrase like beaux arts sounds like \boh zahr\. We can thank French for the origin of the term liaison, as well. It comes from Middle French lier, meaning “to bind or tie.” Other English senses of liaison apply it to all kinds of bonds—from binding and thickening agents used in cooking (as in “a butter and flour liaison”), to people who work to connect different groups, to the kind of secret relationship sometimes entered into by two people who are romantically attracted to one another.



Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-21 12:00 am

Leonard Bernstein

"Inspiration is wonderful when it happens, but the writer must develop an approach for the rest of the time... The wait is simply too long."
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-21 12:00 am
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-21 12:00 am

Johnny Carson

"If it weren't for Philo T. Farnsworth, inventor of television, we'd still be eating frozen radio dinners."
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day ([syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed) wrote2025-04-21 01:00 am

bodacious

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 21, 2025 is:

bodacious • \boh-DAY-shuss\  • adjective

Bodacious is used as an informal synonym of remarkable and noteworthy, as well as sexy and voluptuous. In some dialects of the Southern and Midland US, bodacious is used by its oldest meaning: "outright, unmistakable."

// The bodacious decor of the boutique hotel is intended to appeal to the young and the hip.

See the entry >

Examples:

"There’s no need to lug in a 6-foot specimen tree to add bodacious botanicals into your home, because even the smallest planters can make a big impact when intentionally pairing striking foliage with a unique vessel." — Kristin Guy, Sunset Magazine, 5 Mar. 2024

Did you know?

Some of our readers may know bodacious as a word that figured prominently in the lingo of the 1989 film Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure. Others may recall the term's frequent use in the long-running "Snuffy Smith" comic strip. Neither the creators of the comic strip nor the movie can claim to have coined bodacious, which began appearing in print in the mid-1800s, but both surely contributed to its popularity. The exact origin of the word is uncertain, but it is most likely a blend of bold and audacious, and it may be linked to boldacious, a now-rare British dialect term meaning "brazen" or "impudent."



Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-20 12:00 am

George Burns

"I was always taught to respect my elders and I've now reached the age when I don't have anybody to respect."
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-20 12:00 am

George Carlin

"If it's true that our species is alone in the universe, then I'd have to say that the universe aimed rather low and settled for very little."
Quotes of the Day ([syndicated profile] quoteoftheday_feed) wrote2025-04-20 12:00 am