Boneyards
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[[Steven Vogeler]]'s ''[[Associationalist Composition No.1]]'' features a [[passage]] referred to as ''Brought up in a Boneyard.'' | [[Steven Vogeler]]'s ''[[Associationalist Composition No.1]]'' features a [[passage]] referred to as ''Brought up in a Boneyard.'' | ||
Revision as of 01:23, 18 Aug 2005
boneyard n. 1. A cemetery; quite literally, a yard of bones. 2. A hospital or nursing home. 3. A school. 4. A strip mall or apartment complex; a neighborhood. 5. A human being, particularly in reference to potentialities. 6. A type of sailor's knot originating in Nova Scotia. 7. A cityscape dominated by skyscrapers.
Non Canonical Text"In consequence, the US remains buried in Korea can never be recovered but are bound to be reduced to earth with the flow of time." -- Foriegn Ministry spokesperson, N. Korea. ....floating desperately, hanging on to a gelatinous hook from the sky....the Ace of Spades presented to the hungry void....see Holy Grail See Also |
DesiderataSteven Vogeler's Associationalist Composition No.1 features a passage referred to as Brought up in a Boneyard. A short-story by Alfred Bester, By Leaps and Bounds, features a character named Winthrop Boneyard who can teleport himself for a maximum distance of 3.14 "neo-meters."
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