Drupelet (pronounced droop-lit)
In botany (plant anatomy), the small drupe, one of the
individual subdivisions (pericarps) composing the outer layer of certain fruits
such as blackberries or raspberries.
1875–1880: The construct was drupe (stone fruit), from the
Scientific Latin, from the Latin drūpa
(plum; over-ripe or wrinkled olive), from the Ancient Greek δρύππᾱ (drúppā) + -let (the diminutive suffix). The
–let suffix was from the Middle English –let
& -elet, from the Old French -elet, a double diminutive from the Old
French –el & -et.
It was used to create diminutive forms and in English is widely appended
(booklet: a small book, applet: a small computer application, piglet: a young
pig et al). It’s applied almost
exclusively to concrete nouns and except in jocular use (and unusually for a
diminutive) never with names. When used with objects, it generally denotes
something smaller; when used with animals, it is of their young form; when used
of adult persons, it’s usually depreciative, connoting pettiness and conveying
contempt. A special use was in suits of
armor where it denoted a piece of the larger whole, this sense carrying over to
some aspects of military uniforms. In
the Late Latin, a drupella
was a “small ripe olive”. The synonym is drupel.
Drupelet & drupel are nouns, drupaceous & drupelike are
adjectives; the noun plural is drupelets.
A handful of raspberries.
Drupelets are the individual subdivisions
(pericarps) and technically are small individual fruits which comprise the
aggregate, fleshy outer layer of certain fruits such as blackberries or
raspberries, assembled over the seed within.
The bramble is in the large genus Rubus of flowering plants in the rose
family (Rosaceae) including raspberries, blackberries and hybrids such as
loganberries and boysenberries. Typically
erect or trailing shrubs with canelike stems (although some species are
herbaceous), many spread vegetatively and are noted for the protective prickles
along their branches. Delighting
botanists, many species freely hybridize with each other, making the task of classification
more or less permanently a work in progress.
Strictly speaking, the aggregate fruits (such as the raspberry and
blackberry) are not, despite their names, true berries.
The Razzie trophy (note the detailed druplets).
Dating from 1981, the Golden Raspberries
Awards (known within the industry as “the Razzies” and it is the word Razzie
which is printed on the physical trophy) was established as a parody of the
annual Academy Awards (the Oscars) run since 1929 by the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences. The event,
now conducted immediately before the Academy Awards, “honors” the worst of that
year’s cinematic releases and in addition to a number of innovative categories,
its awards mirror those of the academy including: Worst Picture, Worst
Director, Worst Actor, Worst Actress, Worst Supporting Actor, Worst Supporting
Actress & Worst Screenplay. The name is based on "blowing a raspberry" which is to make a expression of derision or disapproval by blowing air through the lips (known in the US ironically as the "Bronx cheer"). Receiving regular or frequent nominations for a Razzie has not prevented
several actors from enjoying successful careers and some have even personally
accepted their awards; nor is there of necessity any relationship between
Razzies and a film’s commercial success.
The relationship between the Razzies and the Oscars is rather like the
Ig Noble prizes which are awarded to those who have published the findings of
research which seems bizarre, absurd or unnecessary. Just as there are researchers who have won
both a Nobel & Ig Nobel prize, some in the entertainment business have
taken home both Oscars and Razzies. I Know Who Killed Me (2007) set a mark
in 2008 by winning seven Razzies (though the record would stand for only two
years), two of which went to Lindsay Lohan although some claimed she deserved
four because in the film she played two parts (the characters may or may not
have been twins); the film has since become a cult favorite and in a regular
feature of special screenings. It may be
apocryphal but the industry lore is that the original design specification for
the Razzie trophy stipulated only that each should cost less than US$1. The statuette itself is a stylized plastic
raspberry (the drupelets spray-painted gold) about the size of a golf
ball-sized, mounted atop a base of used film canisters and a piece of timber
onto which is glued paper printed with the organization’s logo. It’s said the quality of the trophy hasn’t
improved over the decades but the effects of inflation mean the unit cost now
exceeds US$5.
Lindsay Lohan with Blackberry Bold, Los Angeles, 2008.
The conventional wisdom in the IT industry used to be that the only things which last for decades are operating systems and languages. The ability of companies like Microsoft and Adobe to achieve critical mass at the application level has disproved that but the tendency for products to achieve a seemingly unassailable dominance only rapidly to fade from use or even disappear as the market preference switches to something new, remains a feature of the industry. Early in the twenty-first century, Research In Motion's (RIM) Blackberry mobile phone (named because the keys of the mechanical keyboard (vaguely) resembled the fruit’s drupelets) dominated the upper (ie most expensive) segment of the mobile phone market and the famous keyboard played a part in that, being so pleasant to use in an era when the most important (non-telephonic) aspect of the mobile phone was the inherently text-focused e-mail. However, what really sold the things to corporations was RIM’s security layers (the traffic ran exclusively through their own servers which were in secure facilities in regions like Western Europe & North America) which provided what was at the time the most secure form of civilian communication. Blackberries quickly became a status symbol but their technical model was a cul-de-sac and Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android prevailed, Blackberry market share in rapid decline by 2011 and neither re-branding nor corporate restructures could save the company. The modern smartphones are better than the Blackberry in every way except the keyboard because there is (as yet), no way in which a touch-screen can emulate the seductive, tactile experience of the mechanical.
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