Notes and Errata - Pages 983-1079
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Contents
- 1 Page 983
- 2 Endnote 3
- 3 Endnote 5
- 4 Endnote 5a
- 5 Endnote 6
- 6 Page 984
- 7 Endnote 7
- 8 Endnote 8
- 9 Endnote 8a
- 10 Endnote 8 (cont'd)
- 11 Endnote 12a
- 12 Endnote 13
- 13 Page 985
- 14 Endnote 17
- 15 Endnote 19
- 16 Endnote 21
- 17 Endnote 23
- 18 Page 1035
- 19 Endnote 211
- 20 Page 1038
- 21 Page 1039
- 22 Page 1040
- 23 Page 1041
- 24 Page 1042
- 25 Page 1043
- 26 Page 1044
- 27 Page 1047
- 28 Page 1048
- 29 Page 1049
- 30 Page 1050
- 31 Page 1051
- 32 Page 1052
- 33 Endnote 321
- 34 Endnote 324
- 35 Page 1066
- 36 Endnote 324a
- 37 Page 1066 (cont'd)
- 38 Page 1067
- 39 Page 1068
- 40 Page 1069
- 41 Page 1070
- 42 Page 1071
- 43 Endnote 324f
- 44 Page 1071 (cont'd)
- 45 Page 1072
- 46 Endnote 332
- 47 Page 1073
- 48 Page 1074
- 49 Page 1075
- 50 Page 1076
Page 983
Endnote 3
cardioid
In geometry, a cardioid is a plane curve produced by tracing the path of a chosen point of a circle which rolls around a fixed circle. The cardioid shape of E.T.A. has one cusp, i.e., a point on the curve that is not smooth. The r referred to by the narrator here is the radius of the moving circle.
Übermensch
German for "superhuman"
Brandeis
Brandeis is a Jewish-founded university in Waltham, Mass., about nine miles west of Boston, named for Louis Dembitz Brandeis (1856-1941) the first Jewish Supreme Court justice.
Endnote 5
N.B.
abbreviation for Latin nota bene, i.e., "note well," stated before an important example or corollary point
Endnote 5a
nystagmus
involuntary eye movement
entrepôt
French for "warehouse," this is where foreign merchandise can be purchased duty-free
loquacity
talkativeness
Endnote 6
Halcion (still available in Canada, unbelievably, still)
It's also still available here, though the U.K. has banned it since 1991.
Page 984
Endnote 7
bevelling
Here meaning "smoothed out" and misspelled, beveling is the making of 45º angles where perpendiculars meet.
Endnote 8
Endnote 8a
Muscimole
another mushroom-based hallucinogen, like psilocybin
DDMS
dibromododecenyl methylsulfimide
DMSO
dimethylsulfoxide
Endnote 8 (cont'd)
dickies
As a dickie is designed to give the appearance of wearing a tie, Wallace uses this word here to deal with drugs that mimic the effects of other drugs.
MMDA, DMA, DMMM, 2CB, para-DOT I-VI
You can read about MMDA here, DMA here, 2CB here, DOT here (apparently). DMMM appears to be made up.
CNS
central nervous system
gamma hydroxybutric acid
now more commonly known as GHB
DMZ/M.P.
DMZ is another made-up drug. M.P. is probably Michael Pemulis.
Endnote 12a
"...Continental Controlled Substances Act of Y.T.M.P., O.N.A.N.D.E.A.'s hierarchy of analgesics/antipyretics/axiolytics..."
There is no such act, obviously. Y.T.M.P. is Year of the Tucks Medicated Pad. The second acronym is Organization of North American Nations Drug Enforcement Agency. Analgesics are painkillers. Antipyretics are fever-reducing drugs, and anxiolytics are anxiety-reducing drugs.
Endnote 13
Quo Vadis
Latin: Where are you going? Famously asked of Jesus by Peter when the former was on his way to be crucified. See here. Also a novel and film by that name were made.
Page 985
Endnote 17
datum
piece of information
Endnote 19
French: A person of terrible importance
Endnote 21
Q.v.
Latin abbreviation for quod vide ("which see"), used to direct a reader elsewhere in a book. Here we are directed to...
Endnote 23
U.S.D.D.
United States Department of Defense
Page 1035
Endnote 211
suborn
to bribe or induce someone to commit a crime or misdeed
Endnote 234 · Excerpts From Orin's Interview With Moment
Page 1038
Rafferty
Terrence Rafferty was a film critic for the New Yorker magazine.
NPR
National Public Radio
Page 1039
dun
make repeated demands on
Madison Avenue
the street in New York famous for its advertising firms
traversion
Orin probably means "introversion."
T-square
a drafting tool
Page 1040
Prussian
here used to mean "very strict"
schizogenic
produced or formed by fission
pathogenic
capable of producing disease
Page 1041
antidote
Orin means "anecdote."
Quelquechose
French: something
Page 1042
pièce
as in "pièce de resistance," the punchline or main point
Page 1043
four horsemen
as in the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse from the Book of Revelation
BPL
Boston Public Library
Page 1044
Page 1047
J.O.I.
James O. Incandenza
guile
insidious cunning
larval
immature in its kind
codpieces
a pouch at the crotch of tight-fitting breeches, popular during the Renaissance
Swinburne
Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909) was a British poet whose work had themes of homosexuality and sadomasochism.
prenominate
aforementioned
Page 1048
fairly high-sodium way
i.e., with a grain (or more) of salt
purposive
serving some purpose
cross-sectioned cow
Cornell University apparently has a cow whose stomachs you can see in action.
anaclitic
denoting psychologic dependence
Page 1049
prevarication
lying
"...as if from the Rose Garden..."
like the President of the U.S. answering a question from a reporter
monilial
having to do with vaginal yeast infection
S. Johnson
probably a reference to Dr. Samuel Johnson, the lexicographer
Page 1050
Steeples
Bain has become to get Steeply's name wrong.
Steeley
ditto
ACOAs
Adult Children of Alcoholics
AlaTeens
a support group for teenage children of alcoholics
ACONAs
Adult Children of Narcotics Anonymous
ACOGs
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology
aspic
meat jelly
Page 1051
Starkly
Bain gets Steeply's name wrong yet again.
univocal
unambiguous
furcated
branching or forking
albatross
a burden, from Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Starksaddle
another mistake with Steeply's name
perspicuous
clearly expressed
Page 1052
multivalent
having various meanings
Bainbridge
This isn't even close to Steeply's name.
Endnote 321
(1063-1066)
Rise Over Run
The rise (amount the line increases) of a line divided over the run (length of the line) give you the slope of the line, which is also equal in calculus to the first derivative.
tangent
This concept is explained here.
Differentiation
the process by which one determines the first derivative of a mathematical function
inexorably
relentlessly
covers
songs written by other people than yourself
Digestive-Flora
bacteria that live in the intestine and aid in digestion
Verdun Protestant Hospital
now called Douglas Mental Health Institute
tu-sais-qué
really bad French for "you know what"
Human Hatchet
i.e., Axford
Blue Flames
apparently some sort of drug
O2
oxygen
Jiminy Cricket
a character from Pinocchio
Endnote 324
Year of the Depend Adult Undergarment
Page 1066
moon
to spend time idly
camphonated
more like "camphorated," i.e., contained camphor
Endnote 324a
loamy
consisting of rich, arable soil
Page 1066 (cont'd)
whorl
a circular arrangement
funiculi
plural of "funiculus," i.e., part of the spinal cord
Page 1067
uncolloped
having no fat
latissimal
referring to the lattissimus dorsi muscles
Nordicular
i.e., Nordic, which is to say blond-haired and blue-eyed
armamentarium
an arsenal, particularly used by physicians to refer to drugs or treatments
callow
immature; inexperienced
dinkle
a euphemism for "penis"
Page 1068
three-setter
a tennis game ending in three sets, rather than five, because one player has gone up 3 to 0
cavalier
disdainful; unceremonious
burr
here used to mean "irritant"
Page 1069
canvas restraint-wrap
straitjacket
catgut
This is "a strong cord made by twisting the dried intestines of animals, as sheep, used in stringing musical instruments and tennis rackets, for surgical sutures, etc." (Random House Unabridged Dictionary).
"...his late great Da's..."
Clearly Pemulis has no idea that his brother was molested by their father.
rheumy
full of thin mucous
Page 1070
Bedouins
certain Arabs of the deserts of Arabia and the Levant
buggered
being on the receiving end of anal sex
b/w
Black and white
J. Gleason
Jackie Gleason (1916-1987) was one of the great comic actors of the 20th century.
Zoltan
actually a Hungarian name, which means "ruler"
cretinous
stupid
Page 1071
Endnote 324f
Orly
one of the airports serving Paris
Page 1071 (cont'd)
redoubted
formidable
"...When the boulder's slipped all the way back to the bottom..."
a reference to the myth of Sisyphus
Modus Tollens
a Latin logical term, meaning, roughly, "the means of denying"
Nucleic acids
DNA and RNA
A and G, T and C
adenine and guanine, thymine and cytosine, the compounds that make up DNA
Csíkszentmihályi
The name may be taken from Mihály Csíkszentmihályi (born 1934), a prominent Hungarian-American psychologist. His son Christopher is on the faculty at MIT.
lemma
a proven statement used as a step in a mathematical proof
Boardman MN
a town about 40 miles west-northwest of the Twin Cities
Page 1072
"...Peano, Leibniz, Hilbert..."
Giuseppe Peano (1858-1932) was an Italian mathematician. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) was a German polymath and one of the creators of calculus. David Hilbert (1862-1943) was a German mathematician.
"...Fourier, Gauss, LaPlace, Rickey..."
Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier (1768-1830) was a French mathematician and physicist. Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855) was a German mathematician. Pierre-Simon, marquis de Laplace (1749-1827) was a French mathematician and astronomer. Rickey would seem to refer to V. Frederick Rickey, though he is contemporary while the other named men are not.
"...Wiener, Reimann, Frege, Green..."
Norbert Wiener (1894-1964) was an American mathematician. Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann (1826-1866) was a German mathematician. Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege (1848-1925) was a German mathematician and logician. Green is probably George Green (1793-1841), English mathematician and physicist.
Endnote 332
Page 1073
jury-rigged
a corruption of "jerry-rigged" (a pejorative term about Germans), which basically means rigged in a makeshift, ad hod manner
Page 1074
castigations
criticisms; reprimands
Page 1075
"may the road rise up to meet you..."
part of an old Irish blessing
Page 1076
incubus
a male demon that seduces female humans
glycerine
another name for glycerol