I’ve had two or three goes at starting this post and they have all petered out. I decided to take a break and pay an invoice, and found that I had several messages on my phone. I haven’t picked it up since ringing work on Wednesday. In that time I have been sent three messages – hardly the most thriving social life, but more than usual. One is a get well soon message, one is a picture of an Edward VIII post box and one is delivery details for my injector pens.
It seems, despite it not triggering the spellchecker, that dullability isn’t a word. Ah! It didn’t trigger the spellchecker in the title, but it has done in the text. I see it as a late Victorian to 1930s word. It should mean the ability to be dull, implying a certain amount of choice and style, calling some one dullable would be similar to calling them clubbable. Of course, they wouldn’t be as sociable as a clubbable person. It would have taken a knock in the Great War, as shellfire is generally considered to be the antithesis of dullness, and WW2 would have polished it off completely as aerial bombing followed by TV would have made dullability all but impossible. It would be such a useful word . . .
Covid, for instance, would allow it to flourish, as people work from home and no longer socialise with workmates. Or merely sit at home struggling to find 250 reasonably interesting words. I could release myself from the shackles of cheeriness and moan to my heart’s content if only it were possible for people to refer to me as a dullable sort of chap.
A two part photo hit – we have been eating soup, but dreaming of cake.
I may use that in a poem.
There will be more dullness later today.


May I please use ‘dullability’. My spell check want to call it durability but I don’t like that.
Feel free. If enough of us use it, we may be able to start a movement . . .
Pingback: Covid, Filing and a Cough | quercuscommunity
Good word. A blanket of dullability has settled over us since Covid. It is hard to shift it.
It has definitely settled. Julia pointed out we have only been to the coast once this year. I just don’t want to travel.
I was never so much a fan of regular cakes as I was of a good cheesecake. The dairy seems to activate a lot of inflammation and I can’t eat dairy anymore. I have a friend who was well known for her homemade cheesecakes in her younger days, and used to supply a local restaurant near where we grew up. I was the recipient way back when of one of her creations, and it was good!
They have their good points, but ordinary cakes last better.:-)
Stick to the cake to get better
😉