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#121538 01/28/04 11:50 PM
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 13,858
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wwh Offline OP
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More about the little girl and her lost doll.
The Child sniffed at therapeutics, chewed a thumb, and wailed for her Betsy. And all this time cablegrams were coming from Santa Claus saying that he would soon be here and enjoining us to show a true Christian spirit and let up on the pool-rooms and tontine policies and platoon systems long enough to give him a welcome."

From Quinion, World Wide Words
"TONTINE
A system of annuities in which the benefits pass to the surviving subscribers until only one is left.
The tontine is named after Lorenzo Tonti, a Neapolitan banker who started such a scheme in France in 1653, though it has been said that they were known in Italy earlier. Each subscriber paid a sum into the fund, and in return received dividends from the capital invested; as each person died his share was divided among all the others until only one was left, reaping all the benefits. In the original scheme, the capital reverted to the state when the last subscriber died, so it was really a kind of national lottery. The idea was taken up enthusiastically in France and later in Britain and the USA; it was used to fund buildings and other public works. (There are still several hotels and other buildings in Britain and the USA with the word in their names.) Later there were private schemes in which the last survivor got the capital as well. Tontines were eventually banned in Britain and the USA, because there was too much incentive for subscribers to bump each other off to increase their share of the fund, or to become the last survivor and so claim the capital. For that reason, it’s a wonderful plot device for detective story writers, who can use it as a motive for serial murder; it was the theme of The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne in 1889 (made into a film in 1966). The concept survives in a limited way in France.
World Wide Words is copyright © Michael Quinion, 1996–2004.
All rights reserved."


#121539 01/29/04 05:12 AM
Joined: Apr 2000
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Yes, I learnt this word from the film. I highly recommend the film, it is very very funny: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061204/

Bingley


Bingley
#121540 01/29/04 05:50 AM
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296
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Oh, my, wwh, another legal term. Blagh! It's times like this that I really do wish I had that Scrabble dictionary so I could see whether learning the word would afford one at least a practical application.

It is a very pretty-sounding word, however, and it's too bad it's restricted to a meaning I will never remember. I wish it had meant 'having the appearance of great physical or spiritual weight.'



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