Transcript:
Rat: Hay, Pig. This is Harold. He teaches a number of languages at the university.
Pig: I see. What languages do you enjoy the most?
Harold: Well, at school, it's axiomatic that my tastes can be a bit mercurial and antediluvian.
Rat: Pompousese.
BE THIS GUY about 9 years ago
How does one teach pre-flood languages?
BE THIS GUY about 9 years ago
^Very good.
Kind&Kinder about 9 years ago
Pomposity is a monstrosity. But, probably, it’s all because we’re not living in his world, nor he in ours. Maybe we should all increase our vocabulary and be a little pompous, too.
jimmjonzz Premium Member about 9 years ago
I’ve always read broadly on many subjects. When as a high school student I first began to read essays and articles by William F. Buckley, I thought he deliberately chose ornate language and obscure words to “show off.” I found it tedious to constantly consult a dictionary while reading him. At some point while in college, I began to enjoy the precision of his language. Later, I came to admire his ability to choose (almost always) exactly the right words and perfectly nuanced phrases to say exactly what he meant and nothing else. I mention Buckley as an example partly because I very seldom agreed with him, but he forced me to become more rigorous in my own logic, writing, and speech, and I am grateful for that. I’ve come to believe that the ability to think clearly depends largely on having the right words to embrace subtle distinctions and synthesize apparently disparate concepts. When someone suggests that I use too many “big” words, I sometimes answer, “Aw, that’s a lotta mayonnaise!” And we all know what “mayonnaise” means, even if it is a ten letter word, no?
Mikel V about 9 years ago
Well, It can’t be worse than learning french!
ursamaj about 9 years ago
Antediluvian? Why, he could probably talk to the Flintstones!
nosirrom about 9 years ago
I took a language in school, but after all of these decades since then I still haven’t mastered English.
matjestaet about 9 years ago
In German, “antediluvial” would be “vorsintflutlich” (= “pre-sin-floody”), and, dpending on the context, “mercurial” might be translated to “quecksilbrig” (= “qucksilvery”).
Although these words are even longer than their English equivalents, they are absolutely common and far from being pompous.
matjestaet about 9 years ago
So true…. but thre is nothing like "Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz "….
OK, maybe “Donaudampfschiffahrtselektrizitätenhauptbetriebswerkbauunterbeamtengesellschaft”…..
wcorvi about 9 years ago
I eschew obfuscation.
Brass Orchid Premium Member about 9 years ago
Wow… speaking of the pompatus of love…
phylum about 9 years ago
this strip is….ullbay hitsay……
juicebruce about 9 years ago
Why doesn’t that guy just teach the language of Larry and Bob ………………..Croc……there is some logic in there also………..
mammamoonbeam about 9 years ago
I can use 4 letter words or 4 syllable words with equal ease depending upon what the situation demands. Only 1 language though…
Al Nala about 9 years ago
Harold no doubt landscaped with that pompous Pampas Grass.
zeexenon about 9 years ago
Last word — not the way I’d spell it.
Mike Parsons Premium Member about 9 years ago
So, he teaches French?
Constancy about 9 years ago
i jusst got a laff.
abbybookcase about 9 years ago
clearly, somebody who carries his ivory tower with him everywhere he goes; like a turtle and his shell
Number Three about 9 years ago
I’m sure Rat knows plenty of words in different languages.
Swear words.
xxx
codedaddy about 9 years ago
Not a sensible application of the word “axiomatic”.
TIMH about 9 years ago
Real pomposity is using three-syllable substitutions for three-letter words.
wiatr about 9 years ago
Rat comes across as mercurial AND antediluvian. No wonder he doesn’t like the guy.
Shimmery Mermaid about 9 years ago
#huh?
bmonk about 9 years ago
Should we execrate someone just because he exuberantly enjoys sesquipedalianism?
Alfkowitz about 9 years ago
I see that he doesn’t teach English. Mercurial means angry and antediluvian means pre-flood. Neither of those are languages. He’s as bad as people who say “indeed” in an attempt to sound intelligent.
alantain over 1 year ago
Pompousese? More like Gibberish. Though it is sometimes hard to tell the difference.