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2008
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Oct 2008
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- Why is it
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- Shadows, Wall, and Mirror
- One part of my mind
- The view from the top of the U of M/Fairview Hospi...
- This Fall
- simple rubrics for simpletons.
- beautiful fall day.
- Noise. I hate noise. What is noise?
- Can't get Rudyard Kipling out of my mind.
- More chiaroscuro, more, more!
- Enough with the Big Wheel, already!
- Nice Duck
- Cheerful thought
- Another pic of the trike
- check out the Kryptonite lock.
- Now I don't remember what the hell I was going to ...
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Oct 2008
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About Me
- The Xan
- Minneapolis, MN, United States
- From 1700s Italy, "dilettante" originally meant "lover of the arts," but became a pejorative when professionalism took hold during the 18th century. A dilettante became a mere lover of art as opposed to one who earned a living from it. Today, the word refers to a poseur, or one pretending to be an artist. synonyms: dabbler, sciolist, dilettanteish, dilettantish, sciolistic Usage Examples “It’s better up here away from the phonies and the dilettantes. Here I can do what I want and no one comes to sneer. You’re not a sneerer, are you?” - Flowers for Algernon ‘There were no scientists in Stuart England,’ we are told, ‘and all the men we have grouped together under that heading were in their varying degrees dilettantes.’ - The Invention of Science Charles wasn’t a dilettante; he was serious about the breeding and created his own new lines of pigeons. - Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith source: https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/dilettante
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