Have you ever wondered about those weird words that appear at the bottom of the blog comment page?  You know, the ones that you have to type in to the little box to prove that you are a real human responding to the post?  At first I wondered if they were even real words because some were so weird. 

I began keeping a list of the words I came across and looked up the definitions when I had time.  All of the words on my list turned out to be obscure types of tropical fruits or seeds, or some sort of plant or tree.  I was able to find definitions and pictures of most of them on the internet, but a few yielded no results.  However, my guess is that they are yet more exotic varieties of fruits, seeds, plants, or trees.

Some of these fruits and seeds were stunningly beautiful or sounded delicious tasting.  Here are some of the more interesting ones I came across:

 

 

Kiwano - A member of the cucumber family; Looks like an oval melon with horns and is very decorative. Picked green, the kiwano horned melon tastes like a mix of lemon and banana. It is a tropical fruit so it cannot be stored in the refrigerator.

 

Katmon - Katmon trees are good and reliable sources of materials for jams and sauces since unlike other fruit trees that produce seasonal fruits, katmon produces fruits almost throughout the year.  Its trees can be an excellent ornamental plant since it has beautiful and big white flowers. They can be planted in home gardens, making their fruits more accessible to housewives. The katmon trees are also sturdy which makes it an excellent windbreak during typhoons.

 

 

             Quinine - A bitter crystalline alkaloid C20H24N2O2 from cinchona bark used in medicine.

 

 

 

 

Salsify - A European biennial composite herb with a long fusiform edible root.

 

 

 

 

Bilimbi - Closely allied to the carambola but quite different in appearance, manner of fruiting, flavor and uses.  The bilimbi is a tropical species it is sensitive to the cold, especially young plants.

 

 

 

 

Sapodilla - A uniquely flavored fruit, the soft brown flesh of the sapodilla tastes a bit like a sweet mix of brown sugar and root beer. The sapodilla tree is also the source of chicle, a chewing gum component.

 

 

 

Grumichama - A minor fruiting member of the Myrtaceae,  in Brazil; also called Brazil cherry.

 

 

Lovi-Lovi - A fruit related to ramontchi and rukam. It is now cultivated in Malaysia, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka for both its fruit and decorative foliage. The fruits are round, cherry-sized, and dark red when ripe. Some are sweet, but most are sour and astringent, and normally used for making jams and syrups.  I couldn't find a photo of the lovi-lovi, but I lovi-lovied the name!

So the next time you comment on a blog, take a moment to find out about that unique fruit or seed name you are typing in!

 

41 Comments on AR Authentication Words - What Do They Mean?

FEB
09
2008
105,486 Points

WOW Linda, Never would have thought of that. I just notice that my web browser is now remembering the names. Guess I must be spending way to much time here.

Happy Selling!
Tony Grego -Indiana Mortgage Broker

10:20am • #1
288,824 Points 2 Featured Posts Outside Blog
Interesting...and I just thought they were letters to make sure we were really people!
10:25am • #2
This was a very interesting post Thanks Karen
10:37am • #3
2 Featured Posts

Hi Linda,

I too have wondered about those words.  I thought it was more for security measures.  It is  great that you discovered the meanings!  Great job and I love the pictures.  You just never know what you are going to learn.  Thanks for sharing!

Irene Woodworth, DCI, IRIS, CISS, One Day Redesigns

11:00am • #4
240,122 Points 21 Featured Posts Outside Blog
I've wondered if Active Rain has a subversive desire to open up a "smoothies" business. Because a lot of these verification words look like stuff you'd put into a blender.
11:27am • #5

The authentication words are all fruits and berries type stuff.

I used to look a few of them up.  Now IE fills most of them in as soon as I start typing.

I just click and go.

Interesting to see some of the pictures of the stuff we're typing.

12:00pm • #6
183,018 Points 2 Featured Posts Outside Blog

I had no idea these were real words... that's amazing, thanks for looking those up.  I think I'll have to try to find some of these to try...

Chris

12:06pm • #7
1 Featured Post

Tony, Gary, and Karen and Chris - Thanks for visting my blog!

Irene - I'm glad you enjoyed the photos!

Chuck - I think you're on to something there with the "smoothies" thing....

Erby -Hmmm, IE does not fill them in for me.  :-(

Interestingly, and unbeknown to me, Debe Maxwell posted a blog on the same thing earlier in the day entitled Silly Little Words at the End of Your Posts...

12:16pm • #8
5 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor

Well... I knew most were fruits or veggies, but some were just beyond me as to whator where they were from...

Thanks for the key to the castle... er, uh, menu... 

12:40pm • #9
140,787 Points 8 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router

I guess we all have been thinking about it!  Cute blog.  (jaboticaba - is that a word, sounds like a language?!)

12:50pm • #10
316,955 Points 45 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Hi Linda - some of those funny little words I did know were fruits and veggies, but some of the ones you wrote about I didn't know.  What pretty pictures of those strange-sounding words!

I read Debe's post this morning, and she had me chuckling all the way through it - very funny post!

Ann, "loquat"
I know that one's a fruit, because my mom loved those.

12:51pm • #11
165,557 Points

And to think I thought many of those words had no meaning at all.  What about love-in-a-mist and "goatnut".  Thanks for clearing that up.  I appreciate it.

12:51pm • #12
135,460 Points 2 Featured Posts Outside Blog Hit Router
(Nigella damascena), an annual herbaceous plant of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae). Native to the Mediterranean region, it is now grown in gardens throughout temperate regions of the world. It grows 45 to 60 cm (18 to 24 inches) tall and has lacelike leaves. The delicate flowers, blue or white and about 4 cm across, are set within a circlet of threadlike green bracts. Pinks and purples...

love-in-a-mist...

Now I'm going to want to look all of these up!

12:59pm • #13
6 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor

Its never a bad thing to increase ones vocabulary.. :) Thanks

1:30pm • #14
thats funny how you where able to put 2 and 2 together, talk about observant
1:49pm • #15
183,002 Points Outside Blog
It never crossed my mind to even know what those words meant. I just put it in and moved forward.
2:19pm • #16
535,227 Points 45 Featured Posts Outside Blog
We used to have a fairly limited selection of common fruits, that got very boring. I've enjoyed the exposure to a more international selection.
3:31pm • #17
124,268 Points 3 Featured Posts Outside Blog
I'm glad to finally know where those whacky words came from. Thanks for sharing that info...
4:10pm • #18
405,598 Points 72 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Linda...

I am convinced that the AR Programmers are intentionally trying to drive us insane :)

Those 9 and 10 letter words force me to submit my comment with out doing the human test just so I can type in a 5 or 6 letter word.

In my AR world...Speed is key :)  

LOL...I got me a lemon. At least I know what that is :) 

TLW...ROAR!

4:22pm • #19

Litchee- (he word in your example) a Chinese tree which bares edible fruit.

Sepiaia- (my word to submit this comment) much tougher to define so I copied Sepiaia, Flacourtia sepiaia, Flacourtiaceae. Service Tree, Sorbus domestica, Rosaceae. Serviceberry, Amelanchier canadensis, Rosaceae ...
 Thanks for the post

4:37pm • #20
190,900 Points Outside Blog
I figured it was some kind of plant connection, but never went to the extent to perform any research.  I thank you for doing your research to enlighten us.
5:47pm • #21
379,541 Points 1 Featured Post Outside Blog

Wow ..... Thanks for enlightening my knowledge of these words. It actually was/is interesting. Thanks

Sean Allen

6:13pm • #22
420,285 Points 59 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Nice presentation, Linda!  Mine post earlier on this was WAAAYYY too long!!

BTW:  I got 'pecan' this time!  Woohoo, I don't have to go look that one up!!

 

6:33pm • #23
1 Featured Post
Linda. Linda. Linda. You have way to much free time on your hands! :>)
6:39pm • #24
303,295 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Linda - I'm so glad you put a picture of the belimbi... I saw a tree the other day in Paia and had no idea what it was, now I know!  Very strange looking tree, covered with those green things.  THANKS!

BTW I also did a post about some of the other tropical fruits... which will take you to another post about Lychee.

7:49pm • #25
1 Featured Post

hahahahha - I will jump on the bandwagon ... I, too, have been wondering that for a couple weeks now.  A voice for us all, you are!  Happy blogging ...  OH, and my word is  TUNA

8:01pm • #26
1 Featured Post

To All - Thanks so much for visiting my blog and leaving your comments! I guess we all consider ourselves lucky on those rare occasions when we get an easy word!  Right now, my authentication word is "tapioca", which of course is a granular preparation of cassava starch used especially in puddings and as a thickening in liquid food; also a dish that contains tapioca, such as pudding.

                                                                 Tapioca Root

 

8:24pm • #27
2 Featured Posts

My husband is a landscape designer so I recognized many of the words as botanicals. I

8:32pm • #28
226,895 Points 29 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Linda - ginseng is what's there now. know what that one means. most of the time though, they're something that slows us down. But we do like lovi-lovi. But what is "love-in-a-mist?"

cheers 

9:13pm • #29
114,557 Points 9 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Gary: Love-in-a-mist is when you celebrate your wedding night on a foggy beach.

Now what's ichang?

9:23pm • #30
276,305 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog
Linda, my biggest problem with the authentication words is trying to spell "grumixameira"!  Thanks for an informative post.
10:52pm • #31
345,917 Points Outside Blog
So glad to finally learn what some of the unusual names mean. Seriously had no idea.
11:34pm • #32

Linda, this is great! I can only wish I had thought of this. Now I fear I'll be watching the authentication words more closely :-)

Oh no, it's cashew to get out of here (whew, an easy one).

11:41pm • #33
FEB
10
2008
121,298 Points 6 Featured Posts Outside Blog
I never thought those were actual words. I thought it was just some non sense needed to be typed to verify I want this comment to be posted. That is crazy!
12:54am • #34
344,614 Points 3 Featured Posts Outside Blog
  All this time I thought they were entries to the jelly belly contest for new flavors...
10:11am • #35
255,999 Points 3 Featured Posts Outside Blog
Linda, great research. I have to say some of those words make you wonder, are they just making this up? LOL! Thanks for sharing what you learned.
1:57pm • #36
114,557 Points 9 Featured Posts Outside Blog
So...what the heck is a quandong?
8:38pm • #37
FEB
11
2008
1 Featured Post

Hi Joey - A quandong is a unique fruit native to Australia!  Thanks for visiting my blog!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5:50am • #38
475,707 Points 3 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Hey Linda.  I have also blogged about this on two occassions.  I always wanted to know about MOOSEWOOD lol

HAve a good day

Don

6:29am • #39
116,381 Points Outside Blog
Most of the words did make me wonder about about their meaning. Thanks for the history lesson. 
7:05am • #40
SEP
05
2008
Outside Blog

I did a blog about this some time ago as well.  I've gotten some easy ones, but sometimes they are really crazy!

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12:56am • #41

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Linda de Bree

Stafford, VA

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Linda de Bree, Notary Public

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