Blog: An Onomatopoeia for Vomit

You should love more than you hate, since this world’s filled with far more good than evil. That said, I hate few things, but one is this word “blog.”

Oh, I get how it came about. People started creating new pages on a website back in the late eighties (post-Usenet) to create a log of events and thoughts on the web – a web log or “blog” according to Jorn Bargner. “Web log” sounds cool enough to me, even adventuresome.

The hickification of that word into “blog,” however, sounds exactly like my beautiful bride sounded our first week of marriage. I’ve never seen a beautiful woman so sick, before or since. The poor girl was blog-ing into every trashcan in the house. Kept apologizing for throwing up. Yes, she got better — I make a better writer than nurse, but I can soak a rag and wield a mighty thermometer in a pinch.

Anyways, I’ve been thinking about the word esemplastic. Coleridge formed the word irregularly when he was trying to show what poets did every time they take two unconnected concrete images and smash them together into a new metaphor of being. The images literally “mold into one” and create a new unified idea. An esemplastic idea. It’s a wonderful word and describes the poetry moment beautifully.

Unfortunately, so does “blog” for most “bloggers.” If someone’s complaining, an easy derogatory retort is “don’t like it, then go blog about it.” Blog has become synonymous with vomitous whining online.

But not all blogs work that way…

For years, I’ve followed Yewknee for everything new and pretty and awesome that’s coming out. I keep up with Pioneer Woman for recipes and Patrick Rothfuss for everything nerd. A decade ago, I hung out online with Michelle Johnson of Poefusion who used to give daily poetry prompts and, in so doing, gave me an unorthodox free education in poetics. HypeMachine distills the cool of the internet music. Timothy McSweeney’s Internet Tendency shares hilarious lit-nerd humor. And then there’s the online diary of Samuel Peppys, a diary that simply blows the part of my mind built for historical fiction. Not all blogs sound like whiny excuses for digital upchuck. Some of them work wonders through words and images and sounds.

So, amateur philologist that I am, I created some alternative words to describe internet blogs that transcend their own category of being, because we need a new class for super blogs.

Class suggestions for better-than-average blogs:

  • digiturnal

  • journet

  • cuberbük

  • virlocus

  • imacord

  • symbod

  • synrnet

  • sitery

  • chronexus

  • chainscript

  • minmoir

  • logline

  • histally

monogram new

If you have an opinion about these or a better suggestion than the pukey word “blog,” leave it in a comment below.

 

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  1. Ray Downen

    I like “blog” and don’t see any better words in your suggestions! — Ray Downen

    1. lanceschaubert

      Cool. It’s probably a phonoaesthetic thing — I don’t really like the word “pamphlets” either as it sounds like an STD. Blog sounds like puke to me and reminds me of the frivolous side of blogging — starting with my own. When I’m at my worst, I’m simply vomiting online. When I’m at my best, I’m creating quality stories or advice or even film for people to interact with.

      Yeah, I’m not sure I like any of my suggestions for the perfect word, but I like them all better than “blog” personally. I’d be curious to see if anyone else suggests anything over the coming months.

      In any case, thanks for your first comment, Ray.

  2. Zach Spiering

    digiturnal – reminds me of “regurgitate” and “urinal”
    journet – has a nice sound to it
    cuberbuk – not sure how to pronounce it or what it’s origins are (and I don’t know how to do that symbol over the “u”)
    virlocus – really?
    imacord – I know you are but what am I?
    symbod – I feel like the blog is writing me
    synrnet – we don’t do 3 non-blending consonants in English
    sitery – the place where websites are born
    chronexus – sounds super cool, like a portal between different universes
    chainscript – utilitarian, descriptive, boring
    minmoir – also unsure how to pronounce
    logline – a group of lumberjacks cutting a tree and loading it on the truck
    histally – helps me clear my throat when I say it.

    1. lanceschaubert

      Indeed on digiturnal.

      cuberbuk’s for the Germans in the audience (he’s shy and seldom comments). It’s an umlaut.

      3 non-blending consonants? What about rhythm? rhyme? sync? Sure we do.

      minute memoir — minmoir.

      Love the thoughts. Any other suggestions? Those were just off the top of my head…

      1. Zach Spiering

        They “y” in rhythm, rhyme, and sync serves as a vowel. I was referring to the “nrn” in synrnet.

        Minumoir would be a bit easier to pronounce.

        Keep up the good work!

        1. lanceschaubert

          Keep trying to think of an example and they’re all foreign words

  3. jennifromrollamo

    I vote for minmoir!

    1. lanceschaubert

      Yeah, I like that one too. It’s got a ring to it, it feels minimalistic mixed with temporary, and it also has a depth because of the “moir.”

      Plus it doesn’t come with the baggage of looking like a forced word, at least not to me. Most of the rest seem contrived. Any suggestions?

  4. Before You Start That Blog: Intro | Lancelot Schaubert

    […] of you know my aversion to the word “blog,” my aversion to the false sense of immediacy created by that publish button, my desire for us all to […]



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