A Conversation for Egg
Oblong?
Xanthus Started conversation May 2, 1999
Don't oblong shapes have corners? Ouch! Maybe 'oval' is the word you're looking for. (From the Latin 'ovum' meaning egg)
Oblong?
The Dancing Tree Posted May 6, 1999
Oblong is another word for rectangle, which is *not* another word for "fish". Ovoid would be quite a good word to describe the shape of an egg, and is, in my opinion, a damn fine word anyway. Actually, the best way to describe the shape of an egg is to use the phrase "egg-shaped".
Oblong?
Xanthus Posted May 6, 1999
Doesn't ovoid mean oval(ish)? and since oval means egg-shaped (from the Latin). Doesn't saying an egg is ovoid not mean that it is eggish-shaped?
Oblong?
Jimmy MacJock Posted May 6, 1999
To say an egg is shaped like an egg is OOLITIC (from the latin Oolite), which was an egg shaped stone used to make hens broody. Later on the word was used to described the egg of the Roc ( now extinct ). The eggs of the Roc were used to make a celebration bun known as Roc cakes.
Oblong on the other hand was first used to describe the egg of the DoDo ( also extinct ) So now you know why. Would you sit on an egg with sharp corners for three weeks ? No, You would say "sod this for a game of marbles, Im off to catch a few fish.
Oblong?
The Dancing Tree Posted May 7, 1999
Evidently it is the fact that Dodo's laid cubeish eggs just to be awkward that made them extict, and not, as previously thought, mad European sailors.
Oblong?
Xanthus Posted May 7, 1999
Oblong eggs would be a lot easier to package up and stack on supermarket shelves - just think about the space saving!
Oblong?
The Dancing Tree Posted May 8, 1999
A few years ago I remember some bloke in California growing cube shaped tomatoes. This was, of course, simply due to the fact that they fitted better in sandwiches (although not burger buns). Obviously, he was a fan of sandwiches. Now I kind of like the idea off cube shaped eggs for a similar reason (although it would be difficult to fry them in an exact square). The tomato guy used to put smallish boxes around his tomatoes to make them grow into cubes. I tried putting several chickens in small boxes but this made them irate and also stop laying eggs altogether rather than the desired cube shaped eggs I was aiming for. So, any other suggestions?
Oblong?
Initech_guy Posted May 11, 1999
The last egg I had was neither oblong nor ovoid but chopped up in tiny little bits
Oblong?
Pink Posted May 11, 1999
When discribing shapes, the ending 'oid' is used to discribe two dementional shapes that have been rotated 180 or 360 degrease (depending on the shape). This rotation (if you can imagin) will create a 3D shape. So I think that ovoid is an excilent word to describe the shape of an egg. But i also agree that 'egg shaped' is even better.
Ovoid?
Pink Posted May 20, 1999
Good point, I forgot some eggs are spherical (actually I only ever hear about that about turtle eggs). I was thinking mainly of chicken eggs though.
Ovoid?
Sphincton Smyth Posted May 27, 1999
People always say which came first the chicken or the egg?
Well isn't it obvious, The egg was around thousands of years before
chickens evolved, even dinosaurs laid eggs, you don't need to be a
rocket scientist to work that out do you!
Ovoid?
Pink Posted May 28, 1999
Excellent point, I don't think I ever thought of it like that before. But what came first, the chicken or the chicken egg? Obviously the chicken. Think about it in terms of evolution. It can't be a chicken egg unless a chicken laid it, right?
Ovoid?
The Dancing Tree Posted May 28, 1999
That depends whether the chicken had access to a time machine.
Ovoid?
Xanthus Posted May 28, 1999
It also depends on whether you define a chicken egg as one which is laid by a chicken or one which hatches into a chicken. With the latter definition, the egg must have come first.
Ovoid?
Tomthumb (43028) Posted May 28, 1999
Mathematically speaking (yawn) aren't spheres merely a subset of ovoids? In which case spherical eggs are still technically ovoid.
Ovoid?
Xanthus Posted May 28, 1999
I would agree. Just as a cube is a special kind of cuboid and a square is a special kind of rectangle. And now that I think of it, a circle is a special kind of elipse. I can't remember who in the forum suggested that an -oid is created by revolution of a 2D function, but how does a cuboid fit into this theory? or even a humanoid? I reckon the -oid bit means that it's 'like-shaped'.
A cuboid is almost, but not quite a cube. An ovoid is almost, but not quite an oval. Arthur, therefore helped himself to an unteaoid drink (almost, but not quite entirely unlike tea!) from the Nutri-Matic machine aboard the Heart of Gold.
Oblong?
Cybernard Posted Jul 11, 1999
I have a suggestion to make square eggs.
Since the eggs are made up in the intensines
of the hen, all you need is to shove a square
cylinder up the *you know where*.
Painful for hte hen though. Maybe it will refuse
to lay egss whatsoever with a square cylinder
up its ass anyway.
Key: Complain about this post
Oblong?
- 1: Xanthus (May 2, 1999)
- 2: The Dancing Tree (May 6, 1999)
- 3: Xanthus (May 6, 1999)
- 4: Jimmy MacJock (May 6, 1999)
- 5: The Dancing Tree (May 7, 1999)
- 6: Xanthus (May 7, 1999)
- 7: The Dancing Tree (May 8, 1999)
- 8: Initech_guy (May 11, 1999)
- 9: Pink (May 11, 1999)
- 10: Tem42 (May 18, 1999)
- 11: Pink (May 20, 1999)
- 12: Sphincton Smyth (May 27, 1999)
- 13: Pink (May 28, 1999)
- 14: The Dancing Tree (May 28, 1999)
- 15: Xanthus (May 28, 1999)
- 16: Tomthumb (43028) (May 28, 1999)
- 17: Xanthus (May 28, 1999)
- 18: Cybernard (Jul 11, 1999)
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