I think this is how it happened, though neither of us can remember for sure.
I walked by a colleague’s desk, in a reasonably good mood. Maybe I made a light joke.
C: My, you seem levitacious today.
R: Wow, that’s a great word you’ve coined!
More banter commending the word.
C (in e-mail): Which spelling doth thou prefereth? Levitacious or levitatious?
R (in e-mail): Think I like the C, avoiding 2 Ts. How about you?
C (in e-mail): I agree!
R (in e-mail): levitacious (adj)– being filled with joy, levity
C (in e-mail): Excellent!
So, are you feeling levitacious today? Tell me some of the word coinage you’ve done.
What a great phrase! And very perfect for today. I can’t think of any words I’ve coined right now. I’m numb from Christmas shopping and am in need of some levitaciousness. There…does that count? 🙂
I don’t know if it’s “word coinage” (more like “phrase coinage”), but the wife and I always speak of a “Lumumba moment,” named after Patrice Lumumba. Years ago we saw a documentary about the Congo in the 1960s, and at one point, we knew Lumumba was done for and we said, “No good can come of this.” So a Lumumba moment is when the protagonist is doomed, and he/she just doesn’t know it yet.
I am feeling levitacious today!
Some of words I like that I’ve coined:
Adoreky: adorable but freaky. “Tarsiers, baby sloths and sphynx kittens are adoreky.”
Grungery: grumpy from hunger. “No, I’m not really upset with you, just grungery because I skipped lunch.” This one is now common among some of my friends.
A friend also coined the phrase “crash box,” which I use now. It’s the box you throw everything random in when you’re moving. “Crash” is an acronym for “Crunch time stash it.”
Hmmmm. I guess that meaning works, although in my ear it sounds like something David Copperfield (the magician, not the Dickens character) would do: “Oh my, Mr. Copperfield’s gone levitacious again!” As he, you know, levitates.
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year Rog.
My personal favorite — largely because there are so many opportunities to use it — is “guanophenia,” defined as the state or condition of being bat**** crazy.
I use guano as a term for crazy people too!
I’ve googled this word today, not necessarily because I was feeling joyous, but more because I wanted a word for the act of being light hearted in a humorous way. Almost instead of speaking sarcastically, instead of saying “Oh no, I was speaking with levity” I could say “I was being levitacious”