Jargonauts are people who are fond of bureaucratic terms as also a person who uses a lot of jargon in everyday conversation or while writing. A jargonaut is also a person who is adept in comprehending everyday jargon-filled literature. A person who aims to invent new jargon.
Read More »Which queen’s favourite started to write The History of the World while awaiting execution?
None other that the famous courtier to Queen Elizabeth I, Sir Walter Raleigh. After Queen Elizabeth I died, King James I ascended the throne. James did not like Raleigh who was soon arrested on a trumped up charge of high threason, condemned to death and imprisoned in the Bloody Tower at the Tower of London. It was there that he …
Read More »Which poet Laureate was said to have worked himself to death?
Robert Southey was born at Bristol, August 12, 1774. When he was 20 years old, the French Revolution was in full swing and Southey was so inspired by this that he stupidly conceived the idea of founding a communal republic in the United States. He was ably abetted in this notion by Samuel Coleridge, also a poet. The two young …
Read More »Which notorious duellist was also an author and play and playwright?
Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac. He was a gascon, as was D’ Artangnan the hero of The Three Musketeers. In fact, both swordsmen lived at the same time for D’ Artagnan really lived. He was a king’s Musketeer who became a Marshal of France. Cyrano de Bergerac was born in Perigord in Gascony, a south-west province of France in 1619. He …
Read More »Which is the world’s longest storybook?
Marcel Proust’s ‘A La Recherche Du Temps Perdu’ (translated as In Search of Past) is the world’s longest novel, according to the Guinness World Records. The influential 13-volume work contains 9,609,000 characters, with each letter and space counting as one character.
Read More »Which french poet was the hero of the very popular operetta The Vagabond King?
He was Francois de Montcorbier, known as Villon, born in 1431. His father died when he was quite young and he was brought up by a relative, Guillaume de Villon, whose name he adopted. He was educated at the University of Paris from where he graduated in 1449. He soon fell into bad company and roistered through the seedy taverns …
Read More »Which author wrote three books, each containing the word beau in title?
The titles of the three books are Beau Geste, Beau Sabreur and Beau Ideal and they were written by Percival Christopher Wren who was born in 1885. Having served in the British, French and Indian armies and having been a member of the French Foreign Legion, he was for a while assistant director of public education in the Bombay Presidency. …
Read More »Where does sugar come from?
Sugar is a food that people use for energy. Each person in the USA uses, on average, about 41 kg (90 lb) of sugar a year. All plants produce sugar, but the main sources of commercial sugar are sugarcane, a type of grass plant grown in tropical and subtropical regions, and sugar beet, a root crop grown in temperate areas.
Read More »When was The Arabian Nights Entertainments first written?
It is difficult to pin an exact date for this very popular series of stories because they come from various sources, Indian, Persian and Arabian. Sir Richard Burton, who was responsible for the most popular translation, reckoned that some of the stories Sinbad, for instance dated back over a thousand years.
Read More »When Sir Walter Scott was made bankrupt, how did he pay off his debts?
In his own words “This right hand shall work it all off”. In 1809 he had supplied half the capital of the published, Ballantyne & Co. Although he made a lot of money from his poems and books, he spent much of it on building his home, Abbotsford. In 1826 Ballantyne were in very serious financial difficulties and Scott had …
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