_Sample_:
![[End-of-lie - Come Next Spring.wav]]
_Idea_:
Bad imitations of Scott Walker as slow as possible.
Old English: _uncuð_, which swerves around: the unknown, the uncanny, the strange, unusual; uncertain, unfamiliar; unfriendly, unkind, rough, from un- (1) "not" + cuð "known, well-known," past participle of cunnan "to know" (see can (v.1), from PIE root gno- "to know." Meaning "strange, crude, clumsy" is first recorded 1510s. The compound (and the thing it describes) widespread in IE languages, such as Latin ignorantem, Old Norse ukuðr, Gothic unkunþs, Sanskrit ajnatah, Armenian ancanaut', Greek agnotos, Old Irish ingnad "unknown."
Etymology: _etymonline.com_