| Title: | The Joy of Lex | 
| Notice: | A Notes File even your grammar could love | 
| Moderator: | THEBAY::SYSTEM | 
| Created: | Fri Feb 28 1986 | 
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 | 
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 | 
| Number of topics: | 1192 | 
| Total number of notes: | 42769 | 
There are three English words ending with NGRY. Two of them
are angry and hungry, what is the third ?
The online dictionaries that I have tried do not have a third 
word. Does anyone have the complete OED online ?
    Evan.
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1065.1 | We've been through this before... | OKFINE::KENAH | I���-) (���) {��^} {^�^} {���} /��\ | Wed Sep 01 1993 08:57 | 3 | 
|     There are only two common English words ending in NGRY.
    
    					andrew
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| 1065.2 | FICTIONARY, anyone? | FORTY2::KNOWLES | DECspell snot awl ewe kneed | Wed Sep 08 1993 05:06 | 4 | 
|     But on a bad day I might easily coin the word MALINGRY for a feeling
    that might lead to malingering. Whoops, wrong note.
    
    b
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| 1065.3 | SMURF::BINDER | Sapientia Nulla Sine Pecunia | Wed Sep 08 1993 06:24 | 6 | |
|     Given that malinger derives from the French malingre, a sickly person,
    there's no `e' required between the `g' and the `r' and it's not much
    of a stretch at all to get to malingry.  I like it - it's a creative
    and effective neologism.  But a malingerer in English is a goldbrick,
    not an authentically ill person, so it's a leetle shaky - but not so
    much so that I'd eschew it.
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