Week 646: Warped Perspectives Esteemed (adj., syn: employed as a charity case) Style Invitational cartoonist Bob "Robert" Staake offers these puzzling scribblings. What to make of them? Depends on who you are. This week: Tell us how two different types of people, animals, organizations, etc., would interpret any of these cartoons. Winner receives the Inker, the official Style Invitational trophy. First runner-up gets a prize that was actually awarded on Feb. 16, 2003, to Beverly Miller of Vermont: the Eggbutt Horseball, which is a ball that is a toy for a horse. (How the horse knows it's supposed to play ball, we don't know.) Anyway, Beverly had the misfortune of winning her contest under the Czar rather than the Empress, and so she never got her prize. Contacted recently, Beverly willingly offered it up again in exchange for a Loser Magnet and a $42,000 settlement. Other runners-up win a coveted Style Invitational Loser T-shirt. Honorable mentions get one of the lusted-after Style Invitational Magnets. One prize per entrant per week. Send your entries by e-mail tolosers@washpost.comor by fax to 202-334-4312. Deadline is Monday, Jan. 30. Include "Week 646" in the subject line of your e-mail, or it risks being ignored as spam. Include your name, postal address and phone number with your entry. Contests are judged on humor and originality. All entries become the property of The Washington Post. Entries may be edited for taste or content. Results will be published Feb. 19. No purchase required for entry. Employees of The Washington Post, and their immediate relatives, are not eligible for prizes. Pseudonymous entries will be disqualified. The revised title for next week's contest is by Douglas Frank of Crosby, Tex. Report From Week 642, when the Empress asked for new, original words beginning with O, P, Q, R or S. As you'll see below, many of the entries turned out to be portmanteau words, or two words smushed together; or the old classic of an existing word changed by one letter. But there are also some that really matched the contest, like the first runner-up: They're words for concepts that cried out for a good word to describe them. Note: Many people sent in novel meanings for actual words (e.g., "Placid: A mild form of LSD," from Tom Witte of Montgomery Village). This was specifically forbidden in the rules. Because it is another contest. Save those entries for another time. 4 Scatalyst: Someone with the opposite of the Midas touch. (Tom Witte, Montgomery Village) 3 Scienara: A rejection of reason and evidence. "The Kansas Board of Education said scienara to evolution." (Jonathan Guberman, Princeton, N.J.) 2 The winner of the dreidel-motif hospital scrub shirt: Postrophe: A punctuation mark used to indicate plurals and third-person verbs. "Using lot's of postrophe's make's writing very good." (Steve Langer, Chevy Chase) 1 And the Winner of the Inker Oxymorose: Laughing on the outside, crying on the inside. (Stephen Dudzik, Olney) And a Dictionary of Honorable Mentions Occupotion: That afternoon coffee that gets you through the rest of the day. (Michelle Stupak, Ellicott City) Ogul: A bigshot in the porno biz. (Ed Gordon, Ashburn) Onanotechnology: The latest in inflatable dolls. (Chris Doyle, Forsyth, Mo.) O'nyms: Pseudo-Irish names given to American products, like O'Doul's Fake Beer. (Kevin Dopart, Washington) Oopsnoxious: Said of someone who "accidentally" bumps into women at a bar. (John Shea, Lansdowne, Pa.) Oppository: What a Labor Party MP calls a Conservative. (Marty McCullen, Gettysburg, Pa.) Orgas: An unpleasant end to what was promising to be a beautiful experience. (Dot Yufer, Newton, W.Va.) Orgee: A revel at which no one was particularly enthusiastic. (Roy Ashley, Washington) Orifuss: Monicagate. (Michelle Stupak) Ostentitious: Having Pamela Anderson-size implants. (Chuck Smith, Woodbridge) Ovareasy: A very fertile woman. (Jonathan Guberman) Pachydermine: A fat lady in a fur coat. (Brendan Beary, Great Mills) Parsehole: One who constantly interrupts a friend to correct their grammar. Excuse me, his grammar. (Brendan Beary) Placcid: Soft and limp, but okay about it. (Paul Kocak, Syracuse, N.Y.) Qaqa: Assessment of the CIA's Arabic translations. (Kevin Dopart) Quipecac: Sick humor. (Tom Witte) Pastriarchy: The upper crust. (John O'Byrne, Dublin) Perfidiot: Someone who's both a backstabber and a moron. (Brendan Beary) Presleyterians: They believe that God Is Love -- a hunka hunka burning love. (Brendan Beary) Prudendum: A flap that the city authorities made strippers wear over their G-strings. (John O'Byrne) Punchkins: The little circles you pop out of paper to put it in a binder. (Ben Schwalb, Severna Park) Pudjorative: A nasty comment about someone's weight. (Mary Ann Henningsen, Hayward, Calif.) Rabbinicate: When a Jewish mother lectures. What, you thought she'd be pontificating? (Peter Metrinko, Chantilly) Ragony: Menstrual cramps. (Tom Witte) Rectomb: A big soft cushion for parking your butt. (Stephen Dudzik) Remedius: The return of a driving salute. (Helen and Paul Stone, Silver Spring) Renebriant: The hair of the dog that bit you. (Brad Alexander, Wanneroo, Australia) Rhettorical: Not giving a damn about how your speech went over. (Michelle Stupak) Rhinoblasty: A punch in the nose. (Greg Arnold, Herndon) Ringoligarchy: An organization led by its least talented member. (Jonathan Guberman) Rototeller: Someone who enjoys dishing the dirt. (Peter Metrinko) Roueh: A Canadian playboy. (Tom Witte) Sabbratical: What a schoolteacher needs every now and then. (Tom Witte) Sanitarry: To spend too much time in the lavatory. (Douglas Frank, Crosby, Tex.) Sapphomore: A woman in her second lesbian relationship. (Kevin Dopart) Scheisster: A really bad lawyer. (Dan Seidman, Watertown, Mass.) Sensylvania: The state that voters in Dover, Pa., finally came to. (John Johnston, St. Inigoes, Md.) Serendeputy: The only way Barney Fife ever managed to capture a criminal. (Brendan Beary) Shelf-gratification: Thumbing through the men's magazines at a newsstand. (Chris Doyle) Shoddenfreude: The perverse pleasure one gets at seeing someone break a heel of her $400 Manolos in a heating grate. (Chris Doyle) Snackrifice: The act of buying something you don't want in the vending machine because it's in front of the item you do want. (Ben Schwalb, Severna Park) Snideways: How one sneers at merlot-drinkers. (Tom Witte) Stirruptitiously: How a gal got out of trouble before Roe v. Wade. (Steve Fahey, Kensington) Sudokuku: Addicted to filling in numbers in little grids. (Pam Sweeney, Germantown) Swain't: An ex-boyfriend. (Tom Witte) And Last: Opicuarous: Containing the letters called for in this contest. (Mike Connaghan, Alexandria) Next Week: Post Mortems, or Ded Poetry Jam