Wordsmith Talk |
About Us | What's New | Search | Site Map | Contact Us | |||
You are not logged in. [Log In] Wordsmith.org » Forums » (Old) Weekly themes. (have been consolidated into a single forum above) » Animal Safari » The bird man of Midway Islands Register User Forum List Calendar Active Topics Search
FAQ
Topic Options ![]()
#170546 - 10/11/07 09:01 AM Re: homonyms [Re: tsuwm]
![]()
Carpal Tunnel
![]()
Registered: 06/24/02
Posts: 7184
Loc: Vermont damn, language is cool._________________________
formerly known as etaoin...
Top
#170548 - 10/11/07 09:15 AM Re: cross-threading correction, apology [Re: zmjezhd]
![]()
Carpal Tunnel
![]()
Registered: 06/23/06
Posts: 5249
Loc: Netherlands, the Hague "personaje cuya simpleza provocaba efectos cómicos"
Yes I do understand and that it means ; a person whose simpleness provokes comic effects.(litterally)
It goes a bit far to dig out Spanish history of theater.
I brought up the guinea pig because they also are pretty comic pets besides being champion reproducers and sharing the word.
As this all came from: bobo. When I look up bobo it still seems to go with modern theatrical items.
Top
#170551 - 10/11/07 09:45 AM Re: booby auf Englisch [Re: BranShea]
![]()
Carpal Tunnel
![]()
Registered: 08/13/05
Posts: 3269
Loc: R'lyeh booby
The OED offers: 1. 'A dull, heavy, stupid fellow: a lubber' (J[ohnson]); a clown, a nincompoop. b. The last boy in a school class, the dunce. 2. A name for different species of Gannet.
The primary meaning has a first citation of 1599-1603 and the secondary of 1634. Close. Ultimate etymology is unknown. Cf. German Bube in the sense of 'fool, lubber'. Kluge connects Bube with English boy and Dutch boef 'crook, rogue, cheat'.
As for clown, the OED has: 1. A countryman, rustic, or peasant. 2. A man without refinement or culture; an ignorant, rude, uncouth, ill-bred man. 3. A fool or jester, as a stage-character (? orig. representing a rustic buffoon), or (in Shakespeare) a retainer of a court or a great house. The etymology connects it with the word clod and various words in Low German languages._________________________
Ceci n'est pas un seing.
Top
#170637 - 10/15/07 06:55 PM Re: booby auf Englisch [Re: zmjezhd]
![]()
veteran
Registered: 05/25/02
Posts: 1529
Loc: Aladamnbama the most watered s... Originally Posted By: zmjezhdbooby
The OED offers: 1. 'A dull, heavy, stupid fellow: a lubber' (J[ohnson]); a clown, a nincompoop. b. The last boy in a school class, the dunce. 2. A name for different species of Gannet.
The primary meaning has a first citation of 1599-1603 and the secondary of 1634. Close. Ultimate etymology is unknown. Cf. German Bube in the sense of 'fool, lubber'. Kluge connects Bube with English boy and Dutch boef 'crook, rogue, cheat'.
As for clown, the OED has: 1. A countryman, rustic, or peasant. 2. A man without refinement or culture; an ignorant, rude, uncouth, ill-bred man. 3. A fool or jester, as a stage-character (? orig. representing a rustic buffoon), or (in Shakespeare) a retainer of a court or a great house. The etymology connects it with the word clod and various words in Low German languages.
Damn...this thread has come full circle.
Edited by themilum (10/16/07 07:49 PM)
Top
Moderator: Jackie
Forum Stats 8423 Members
16 Forums
13686 Topics
209735 Posts
Max Online: 3341 @ 12/09/11 02:15 PM
Newest Members teepee, smoothcriminal86, janbra, junebug, Stephen A
8423 Registered Users
Who's Online 3 registered (wofahulicodoc, jenny jenny, olly), 37 Guests and 2 Spiders online. Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Top Posters (30 Days)
LukeJavan8 86 jenny jenny 68 wofahulicodoc 50 endymion6 43 BranShea 35 Rhubarb Commando 29 Buffalo Shrdlu 19 zmjezhd 16 Jackie 16 Faldage 14
May Su M Tu W Th F Sa 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Board Rules · Mark all read Contact Us · Wordsmith.org · Top
Disclaimer: Wordsmith.org is not responsible for views expressed on this site. Use of this forum is at your own risk and liability - you agree to hold Wordsmith.org and its associates harmless as a condition of using it.
Home | Today's Word | Yesterday's Word | Subscribe | FAQ | Archives | Search | Feedback
Wordsmith Talk | Wordsmith Chat© 2013 Wordsmith
Previous Topic
Index