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Syzygy, EEE-ARRRR (buzzer sound). Sorry, you do not win this weeks set of gardening tools. According to dictionary.com, one is "difficult to digest" and one is "impossible to digest"
Oh, hang on - stewards enquiry - dictionary also says "undigestible - see indigestible".
Not sure I can accept your answer though Syzygy!
[edited by: trillianjedi at 1:36 pm (utc) on Sep. 3, 2004]
trillianjedi - Collins English Dictionary does not list 'undigestible'. As for the Stewards: anyone here able to explain the correct useages of the prefix's 'in' & 'un'? I want those gardening tools...!
[edited by: Syzygy at 2:23 pm (utc) on Sep. 3, 2004]
Stewards : I can't find anything official on prefixes.
<Added>Quote from dictionary.com</Added>
Usage Note: The negative prefix un- attaches chiefly to adjectives ...... Sometimes the noun form of an adjective with the un- prefix has the prefix in-, as in inability, inequality, injustice...... a few stems appear with both prefixes with distinctions of meaning. Inhuman means “brutal, monstrous,” while unhuman means “not of human form, superhuman.”·
[edited by: trillianjedi at 2:45 pm (utc) on Sep. 3, 2004]