smells and words

Frances Morey austin-ghetto-list@pairlist.net
Fri Apr 2 16:14:27 2004


telebob,
That is fascinating. I often wondered where that smell came from. The spell check denies all knowledge of the word.
FM
 


 --- On Fri 04/02, telebob  telebob@sbcglobal.net  wrote:
From: telebob [mailto: telebob@sbcglobal.net]
To: austin-ghetto-list@pairlist.net
Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2004 10:29:12 -0600
Subject: RE: smells and words

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  <P>petrichor (PET-ri-kuhr) noun</P>
  <P>The pleasant smell that accompanies the first rain after a dry spell.</P>
  <P>[From petro- (rock), from Greek petros (stone) + ichor (the fluid that 
  is</P>
  <P>supposed to flow in the veins of the gods in Greek mythology). Coined 
by</P>
  <P>researchers I.J. Bear and R.G. Thomas.]</P>
  <P>"Petrichor, the name for the smell of rain on dry ground, is from oils</P>
  <P>given off by vegetation, absorbed onto neighboring surfaces, and</P>
  <P>released into the air after a first rain."</P>
  <P>Matthew Bettelheim; Nature's Laboratory; Shasta Parent (Mt Shasta, </P>
  <P>California); Jan 2002.</P>
  <P>"But, even in the other pieces, her prose breaks into passages of 
  lyrical</P>
  <P>beauty that come as a sorely needed revifying petrichor amid the 
  pitiless</P>
  <P>glare of callousness and cruelty."</P>
  <P>Pradip Bhattacharya; Forest Interludes; Indianest.com; Jul 29, 
  2001.</P></FONT></FONT><FONT face=arial size=-1><A   href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=23609/*http://promotions.yahoo.com/design_giveaway/static/index2.html">Design 
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