
Clint Hall wrote:Should we ever have such a contest on WLDG, the word found most obviously worthy of immediate heave-ho would no doubt be "hedonistic," which appears mostly on that other website. But beyond the h-word, the list of wine-word candidates seems endless. For starters, try "plump," "full-bodied, "ethereal," "opulent," "immortal," "voluptuous," "elegant," words sprinkled liberally, some twice or thrice, over just one randomly selected page of the Wine Advocate, which probably isn't the world's most clumsy wine publication.
Steve Slatcher
Wine guru
1047
Sat Aug 19, 2006 11:51 am
Manchester, England
Clint Hall wrote:From today's New York Times: "Last Friday the Culture Desk blog of The New Yorker announced a contest asking readers to nominate the word that most urgently needs to be eliminated from the English language.
AlexR wrote:I've never found a good one for "empyreumatique". The word "empryeumatic" does exist in English...
Robin Garr wrote:AlexR wrote:I've never found a good one for "empyreumatique". The word "empryeumatic" does exist in English...
Burnt stew, maybe.
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
12048
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Steve Slatcher wrote:Clint Hall wrote:From today's New York Times: "Last Friday the Culture Desk blog of The New Yorker announced a contest asking readers to nominate the word that most urgently needs to be eliminated from the English language.
As far as wine-speak is concerned, we anglophones could start by agreeing to stick to English. Use "toast" rather than "pain grillé", "blackcurrant" rather than "cassis".
I allow myself to use "sous bois" because I don't know exactly what it means and I can never remember how many "r"s there are in forest or forrest
Rahsaan wrote:Clint Hall wrote:Should we ever have such a contest on WLDG, the word found most obviously worthy of immediate heave-ho would no doubt be "hedonistic," which appears mostly on that other website. But beyond the h-word, the list of wine-word candidates seems endless. For starters, try "plump," "full-bodied, "ethereal," "opulent," "immortal," "voluptuous," "elegant," words sprinkled liberally, some twice or thrice, over just one randomly selected page of the Wine Advocate, which probably isn't the world's most clumsy wine publication.
I'm pretty picky about language, but I'm wondering why you don't like those words? They all seem pretty precise and evocative.
I agree that 'hedonistic' is problematic, for me because of its ambiguity. It speaks to full-throttle pleasure but for some people that comes from 17% shiraz and for others that comes from 11% Muscadet.
Mark Lipton wrote:To me, the dividing line is between those words that serve as descriptors of some form of sensation and those that serve as implicit aesthetic judgments. "Hedonistic," "opulent," "voluptuous" and "elegant" all fail that test, though I am as guilty as any of using that latter term. "Full-bodied," "plump" and even "ethereal" I would argue fall into the former category and thus should escape the censor's blue pencil.
AlexR wrote:Rahsaan,
To me, there is a different emphasis on "voluptuous" and "opulent" than with "full-bodied", a question of degree.
The two former adjectives suggest something Dolly Partonish, exotic, and sensual whereas the third seems rather workaday in comparison.
Rahsaan wrote:Mark Lipton wrote:To me, the dividing line is between those words that serve as descriptors of some form of sensation and those that serve as implicit aesthetic judgments. "Hedonistic," "opulent," "voluptuous" and "elegant" all fail that test, though I am as guilty as any of using that latter term. "Full-bodied," "plump" and even "ethereal" I would argue fall into the former category and thus should escape the censor's blue pencil.
I don't see how 'opulent' and 'voluptuous' are any less of a sensation than 'full bodied'. While the terms may be relative (e.g the Jay Miller vs. Brad Kane spectrum) they refer to structural measurable properties.
Elegant cannot be directly measured, but if we can't call wine elegant then what is this world coming to!
Mark Lipton wrote:Perhaps we have differing understandings of the meanings? Voluptuous to me means exciting to the senses or sexually arousing. It describes the reaction of the observer to the observed, but not a quality of the observed per se (Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle?). Opulent to me means rich or of superior quality, an implicit aesthetic judgment if ever I've seen one.
Clint Hall wrote:I like Mark's distinction between "the reaction of the observer to the observed" vis-a-vis "a quality of the observed." In the sense of the former, the WA's constant repetition of "hedonistic" tells the reader something about Mr. Parker's reaction to the wine, although I'm not sure what, but nothing about the wine itself, and apparently readers believe the word describes the wine, a hopeless state of affairs if the intent of TNs is to communicate something.
Rahsaan wrote:Clint Hall wrote:I like Mark's distinction between "the reaction of the observer to the observed" vis-a-vis "a quality of the observed." In the sense of the former, the WA's constant repetition of "hedonistic" tells the reader something about Mr. Parker's reaction to the wine, although I'm not sure what, but nothing about the wine itself, and apparently readers believe the word describes the wine, a hopeless state of affairs if the intent of TNs is to communicate something.
Except the purpose of tasting notes is to communicate individuals' reactions to the wine. There's a reason very few people clamor to get lab analyses of wines.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
45484
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
James Dietz wrote:awesome post, actually..certain to be immortal
Mark Lipton wrote:Put another way, we object to Parker scores being used in the absence of a written description precisely because there's much more to describing a wine than simply how the reviewer felt about it.
Mark Lipton
Users browsing this forum: AhrefsBot, Apple Bot, ClaudeBot, FB-extagent and 2 guests