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abStevens, Heidi (June 25, 2011). "Had any trouble with your meat hand lately?: Author shares the skinny on 'satyriasis,' 'hypergamy' and other puzzling terms", Chicago Tribune, p. 16.
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^Busch, Jim (November 26, 2006). "'Gilded Tongue' will have you speaking archaically", Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, p. n/a.
^Evans, Rod L. (2006). The gilded tongue : overly eloquent words for everyday things (1st ed.). Cincinnati, OH: Writer's Digest Books.
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^Ruehlmann, Bill (May 3, 2009). "A funny (or is that witty?) take on English", The Virginian-Pilot, p. E7.
^Evans, Rod L. (2009). The artful nuance : a refined guide to imperfectly understood words in the English language (1st ed.). New York: Perigee.
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^Evans, Rod L. (2011). Thingamajigs and Whatchamacallits: Unfamiliar Terms for Familiar Things. New York: Perigee, an imprint of the
Penguin Group.
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^Evans, Rod L. (2012). Tyrannosaurus lex : the marvelous book of palindromes, anagrams, and other delightful and outrageous wordplay (1st ed.). New York: Perigee Book.
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