Thursday, June 17th, 2010
23

Gail Collins Uses Correct Term For Group Of Walruses

WalrusesGail Collins is my favorite op-ed columnist at the New York Times. As much as I admire her, I'll never forgive her for describing House Republicans as a "herd of rabid otters" in a column earlier this year. (Only because there's no such thing as a "herd" of otters. The analogical image itself is impressively accurate.) So I was very happy today when she again went zoological in her writing, but this time got her terms straight.

"At the ritual Congressional lashing of C.E.O.'s this week, we learned that none of the major oil companies have any idea how to control a spill like this, and that their faux plans for handling one in the gulf were made up of boilerplate so undigested that several had sections on protecting walruses – mammals that have not been seen in the area since the Ice Age. "It's unfortunate that walruses were included," admitted Exxon Mobil's chief. The way things have been going, you can't be too careful. If the portents keep piling up, it's easy to envision a headline like: 'Lone Tourist in Pensacola Eaten by Visiting Walrus Herd.'"

Yes: walruses are indeed collected in a herd! (They can also be collected in a "pod" or a "huddle.") Thank you, Gail Collins! And also thank you for the line about a "man-eating pterodactyl" crashing through the windows in the oval office that made me smile and, most of all, for the point at the end of the piece: That while Obama may have won the presidency through rousing oratorical flare, his tone in governing is much more deliberative, even "boring," and that while this often has the hysterical media calling for his head, his achievements thus far prove it to be a good thing.

More importantly, here's some video from National Geographic of walruses (the narrator calls the group a "pack," which sounds okay to me, though it is not listed on Webster's animal group/collective names styleguide page) fighting for space on a melting ice floe.

23 Comments / Post A Comment

Something about a broken clock being correct twice a day (i.e., maybe she always uses "herd").

johnpseudonym (#1,452)

I enjoy watching an obstinacy of op-ed columnists wrestle for column space.

Miles Klee (#3,657)

or a feud of bloggers agree on something

Miles Klee (#3,657)

or a stumble of britons glassing each other

Mount_Prion (#290)

What do you call a group of lesbians?

My good friend decided upon a "gaggle" and that seems to somehow work.

katalist (#973)

Strunk & White recommend "an orgasm of lesbians," or "a paroxysm of lesbians" for formal usage.

SidAndFinancy (#4,328)

Shouldn't that be "visiting walri"?

dado (#102)

It's nice that the oil companies are trying to prevent a murder of walruses.

deepomega (#1,720)

I always thought it was a whisker of walruses.

flossy (#1,402)

Oh, Gail. Your attachment to "herd" is really holding your metaphors back. Let's consider some alternatives so you can step up your game:

–A shrewdness of apes
–A sleuth of bears
–A rabble of butterflies
–A chattering of chicks
–A cartload of chimpanzees
–A piteousness of doves
–A business (or fesnying) of ferrets
–An implausibility of gnus (!!)
–A kettle of hawks
–A prickle of hedgehogs
–A crash (or bloat)of hippopotami
–A smack of jellyfish
–A mischief of mice
–A parliament of owls
–An ostentation of peacocks
–A passel of possum
–A coterie of prairie dogs
–A rhumba of rattlesnakes (!!)
–An unkindness of ravens
–A murmuration of starling
–A warren of wombats

flossy (#1,402)

NB: Walruses can also come in mobs or pods.

These "animal group names" and more were collected in a wonderful book called "An Exaltation of Larks," first published in 1968 and written by none other than James Lipton (the "Inside the Actors Studio" guy).

According to amazon.com, it's still in print (in an expanded edition, no less): http://www.amazon.com/Exaltation-Larks-Ultimate-James-Lipton/dp/0140170960/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_1

cherrispryte (#444)

Hippity: I had that book!

jimjbollocks (#1,545)

Shouldn't it be "ice floe"?

buzzorhowl (#992)

Seconded.

Dave Bry (#422)

"Poor-spelling Blogger Uses Incorrect Term For Chunk Of Ice"

(Thanks. Fixed.)

DMcK (#5,027)

Ice Flow! Nowhere to go!

Can't we create artificial ice floes to prevent this kind of stabbiness?

Along these lines, can I shove my SIL out on one of them?

carpetblogger (#306)

My band was called Parliament of Owls.

Vespiary of Wasps

atlasfugged (#4,481)

@Bookish: That's what I call spending a holiday with my girlfriend's family.

atipofthehat (#797)

I hear the walrus tusks in Louisiana are firmly wedged in place. In Alabama, the Tuscaloosa.

Dave Bry (#422)

Oh my. A tip of the hat back to you.

Post a Comment