RE:RE:RE:Three or four holes into this beast one being a deep statesidereport wrote: Ellen has had to be frugal for so long that even though she could drill all year she is choosing not to play the game the market will want her to play and drill when costs are higher. That will probably have a negative effect on the stock price but that doesn;'t seem to enter into Ellen's thought process.
A pantomath is a person who wants to know and knows everything. The word itself is not to be found in common online English dictionaries, the OED, dictionaries of obscure words, or dictionaries of neologisms.[1] Logic dictates that there are no literal nonfictional pantomaths, but the word pantomath seems to have been used to imply a polymath in a superlative sense, a ne plus ultra ("nothing more beyond") as it were, one who satisfies requirements even stricter than those to be applied to the polymath. In theory, a pantomath is not to be confused with a polymath in its less strict sense, much less with the related but very different terms philomath and know-it-all.