Thursday, June 2, 2016

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20 comments:

  1. Trump supporters going to be confused...

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  2. Long enough to cover the important bits, short enough to keep it interesting. Like a mini skirt.

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  3. Sorry to be pedantic, but parsimonious is not the same as succinct (you mean succinct). Of course, parsimony is good, too.

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  4. John Hummel Parsimonious also means "economy in the use of means to an end," so I think it fits quite well. Succinct is another good word, but doesn't quite capture the essence of being economical in explaining what one means.

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  5. I sand corrected, Craig Froehle. My only familiarity with parsimony was the scientific/explanatory sense of the word.

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  6. "Short is better than long, funny is better than not funny, short and funny is best."
    -- Rotsler's Rules

    "My philosophy is, 'Get in, say what you need to say, get out,' but 'Toss in a grenade and come in firing' also works."
    -- J. Michael Strazcynski

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  7. ..and sometimes to pick the right subject!!

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  8. The debate about the meaning of parsimony illustrates that using short and commonly understood words is better. "Omit needless words" (Rule III, 13 https://faculty.washington.edu/heagerty/Courses/b572/public/StrunkWhite.pdf

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  9. Matt Schofield Parsimonious was the shortest word I know of that meant exactly what I intended.

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  10. Craig Froehle sparing, frugal, thrifty are all shorter, equivalent in meaning, and more broadly understood. Unless you want the sense of mean, closefisted, stinting which the word acquired over time.

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  11. Matt Schofield Those are all good words, too, but they lose the alliteration. ;-)

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  12. What about... fastidious and precise.

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  13. Mark Durham She's a killer que-een...

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Now I'm doubly intrigued!

Now I'm doubly intrigued!