Polygamist dress

Jenny Block: The Big Word Project: Don’t Like What a Word Means? Buy It and Change It

“There’s glory for you!”

“I don’t know what you mean by ‘glory,’ ” Alice said.

Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. “Of course you don’t–till I tell you. I meant ‘there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!’ “

“But ‘glory’ doesn’t mean ‘a nice knock-down argument,’ ” Alice objected.

“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean–neither more nor less.”

“The question is, ” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”

“The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master–that’s all.”

From “Through the Looking Glass” by Lewis CarrollI have long been a fan of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. I loved that the story was driven by a female heroine. But I also loved how both works were engaged in extensive word play. The above being one of the many spots where Carroll takes on meaning making and how people commandeer it, whether rightfully or not.

Words get invented all of the time. Sometimes out of necessity, like “Internet” or “blogging” and other times because of spoken language or group specific language like “dis” or “bogart.” Other times, language is “taken back” in order to reign in its negative connotation like the use of the “n word” by some members of the Black community or the use of the word “queer” by members of the LGBT community. In other words, if we call ourselves that, you can’t use that word against us.

Words are powerful things. They are how we communicate and how we, for better or for worse, define ourselves and others. I feel that pull constantly in terms of what vocabulary I choose when talking about myself, my life, and the choices I have made about both. Sometimes I’m judged based on things that couldn’t be further from the truth but are assumed about me because of words that have multiple and even conflicting meanings. I say what I mean and someone takes it to mean something altogether different.

The definitions of words are also being invented and reinvented all the time. And definitions are funny things. They morph and change and they are not always agreed upon. Many people want, like Humpty Dumpty, words to mean what they want them to mean, nothing more, nothing less. Interestingly enough, that’s now possible for a dollar a letter. Sort of. Confused? So was I. Enter the “Big Word Project.”

Twenty-two-year-old Paddy Donnelly and twenty-three-year-old Lee Munroe, both from Belfast, Northern Ireland, wanted to test out their skills in web applications and viral marketing. So they created the “Big Word Project” where they could sell words without the use of any traditional advertising. Instead, they would rely entirely on blogging and social networking sites.

The idea behind the project is to allow people to redefine words using their own websites as the new definition. It’s an interesting study in terms of the way in which different words means different things to different people. And, Donnelly says, people “have been choosing words for a variety of reasons, some obvious, some not so. It’s really interesting to browse through the vast range of redefined words so far and seeing where they take you.”

Earth day crafts for kids

But the two don’t pull any punches about their motivation to do the project. They have an interest in words, no question, but they also needed a way “to fund ourselves through University and get our names out there as professional web designers,” Donnelly explains. They knew that collaborating with a large number of people, much like what was done with Wikipedia, was the key.

Their hard work and research paid off, over two hundred people, that they know of, are already blogging about it, and the international press is starting to pay attention too from newspapers to radio to a piece in May’s issue of Wired magazine. The site’s “received over 30,000 hits since its launch and, as of writing, we’ve sold over 2800 words,” Donnelly says. And the site has only been around for six weeks.

Munroe describes the success of the project as being based on two things. One, “it is a cheap way of advertising your site and getting some traffic for a particular word” and, two, “people also seem to enjoy the story behind the project and the novelty of owning their own word and associating it with their website.” One hundred words, chosen at random each time the site comes up, are displayed on the homepage in hopes that every visit will inspire the visitor’s curiosity. “We’ve had a lot of feedback from people saying they’ve spent hours just clicking on different words to see where it takes them,” Munroe explains. Plus, “Having more links on more websites can also potentially help towards Search Engine Optimization and ge …

8 Responses to “Polygamist dress”

  1. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Gadu gadu online Says:

    [...] Related posts: Polygamist dress, Endevour [...]

  2. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Calvin broadus Says:

    [...] Related posts: Polygamist dress, Gadu gadu online, Endevour [...]

  3. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Detroit lions draft picks Says:

    [...] Related posts: Polygamist dress, Gadu gadu online, Endevour, Calvin broadus [...]

  4. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Saved Says:

    [...] Related posts: Polygamist dress, Calvin broadus, May 2nd, 2008 wsop, Beth riesgraf [...]

  5. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Wilson s disease Says:

    [...] this video is supercool…it is made by a fan…”my body is a cage”…16 horsepower “clogger” flomax onlien from the album secret southand “hutterite mile”one-time post and videos with arcade fireRelated posts: Jeff garlin, Detroit lions draft picks, 2008 wsop, Endevour, Polygamist dress [...]

  6. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Michael baisden show Says:

    [...] Related posts: Beth riesgraf, Calvin broadus, Alfa dog, Detroit lions draft picks, Polygamist dress [...]

  7. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Manny ramirez catch video Says:

    [...] Related posts: Michael baisden show, Eight belles photos, Orlando woolridge, Polygamist dress, Fritz peterson [...]

  8. Dwindling Rainbow » Blog Archive » Chargers broncos Says:

    [...] posts: Calvin broadus, Sarah pallin, Djokovic roddick, Polygamist dress, On the [...]

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.