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I had been under the impression that the origin of the word nosegay came from a floral decoration that was placed over a horses nose in ceremonial times in ancient England.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Dear lulu: you have indeed been cheated if the swains in Oz give more affection to horses than to young ladies.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Dear Lulu: Just for you! " In Colonial times, nosegays or tussie mussies as they were called, were given as gifts. Here too, the different herbs and flowers symbolized different things. Imagine receiving a small bouquet of violets and knowing that the person giving them to you was pledging their loyalty without uttering a word. It was common practise at the beginning of a courtship in the Victorian era for suitors to give their intended a tussie mussie. The types of flowers often changed as the relationship grew allowing the gentleman to say volumes without speaking a word! Today's society is no different than those of a few hundred years ago. Flowers still hold significant a meaning. " http://www.comfycountrycreations.com/flowergiving.htm
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Carpal Tunnel
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A Word A Day
tussie-mussie (TUS-ee-MUS-ee) or tuzzy-muzzy (TUZ-ee-MUZ-ee) noun
1. A small bouquet of flowers; a nosegay.
2. A cone-shaped holder for such a bouquet.
[Middle English tussemose, perhaps reduplication of *tusse.]
"A woman also had to be pretty precise about where she wore flowers. Say, for instance, a suitor had sent her a tussie-mussie (a k a nosegay). If she pinned it to the `cleavage of bosom,' that would be bad news for him, since that signified friendship. Ah, but if she pinned it over her heart, `That was an unambiguous declaration of love.'" Meadow, James B., Rocky Mountain News, 26 Jan 1998 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ia~~~
ETYMOLOGY: Middle English tussemose, perhaps reduplication of *tusse.
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Carpal Tunnel
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A tussie-mussie is a cross between a nosegay and a corsage. The Victorians would take a few flowers and herbs, make a miniature bouquet, tie some ribbons around it and give it to someone. But this wasn't an ordinary bouquet. A tussie-mussie delivered a message. Depending on what flowers and herbs you choose, your tussie-mussie could say different things, like "I'm sorry" or "I love you." It could say "You are beautiful and have lovely eyes." It could ask "Will you be my friend?" or even "Will you marry me?"
Once you decided what you wanted your tussie-mussie to say, you also had to decide how to deliver it. Would you deliver it personally; or send someone else? Or maybe just put it on the doorstep, ring the bell, and hide.
What the recipient did with the tussie-mussie was the response. If she didn't wear it, or wore it in some inconspicuous place -like the hem of her skirt- that was a negative response. If she wore it on her head, perhaps in her hairdo or on her hat, she was saying, "Let me think about it." But if she wore it proudly over her heart, she said "Yes, definitely, yes."
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An embarrassing discovery: Please forgive me, Wordsmith. Date: Mon Sep 14 00:08:22 EDT 1998 Subject: A.Word.A.Day--tussie-mussie
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Welcome, lulu--neat name. :-) I for one have no knowledge of decorating horses' noses with flowers; but any such would have to be fastened to the bridle, for obvious reasons.
That's pretty cool, Dr. Bill, that flowers can communicate whole messages--and replies--without spoken or written words. I wonder if anything else has ever "developed" that far. I know that ribbons and armbands, for ex., can signify things: certain alliances, support, mourning. And I think, in former days, that feathers in hats could also transmit some form of message, but as far as I know none of these things "gave" replies.
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