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#5534 08/23/2000 11:20 AM
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I have been trying to find an accredited collective noun for butterflies - there are plenty of suggestions on the web but does anyone know a collective noun for butterflies which can be traced to any authorised source?


#5535 08/23/2000 1:37 PM
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<< collective noun for butterflies >

Collective nouns were originally called "nouns of congregation" (when I was a youth, many years ago) Possibly the ommission of such a noun for butterflies is because they don't congregate ?


#5536 08/23/2000 3:25 PM
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if you've ever seen a Monarch migration, you would have to agree that (while they may travel individually) they certainly congregate wherever there is milkweed.

and on a coincidental note, Amazon claims that "What do you call a group of butterflies?" is to be published this month, so perhaps we'll soon have an answer....


#5537 08/23/2000 3:43 PM
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> if you've ever seen a Monarch migration,

As a staunch republican (with a small initial), a Monarch migration is what I would dearly love to see.


#5538 08/23/2000 5:28 PM
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Rather belated welcome, Rhuby!

>>As a staunch republican (with a small initial), a Monarch migration is what I would dearly love to see.

That was a good one! Very slick. Yes, I chose purple deliberately.

Looking forward to reading many more from you!




#5539 08/24/2000 11:27 AM
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Welcome, Tim, and thank you for giving me another opportunity to check James Lipton's wonderful "An exaltation of larks". Alas he has nothing on butterflies, but as usual, I found some other beauties:

- a piddle of puppies

- a sloth of bears (no polar bears, Jackie!) and

- an incredulity of cuckolds.

More when serendipity strikes again.




#5540 08/25/2000 4:16 AM
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a churn of butterflies, perhaps? Or a stomach of butterflies?

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#5541 08/25/2000 5:29 AM
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#5542 08/25/2000 1:06 PM
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flurry sounds so... well... agitated. how about 'float' (apologies to M. Ali), or even 'flutter'....


#5543 08/25/2000 3:01 PM
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i'll go with "stomach of butterflies"


#5544 08/25/2000 8:51 PM
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#5545 08/26/2000 12:32 AM
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Very belated welcome, Tim. (I got interrupted during my last visit here.)
Muhammad Ali is from where I live. One of our major
downtown streets got changed to Muh. Ali Boulevard.

I like the word float, myself, but actually have always just
said there was a cloud of butterflies.


#5546 08/27/2000 3:42 AM
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>if you've ever seen a Monarch migration...

while not specific to butterflies, there is this from the OED:

flight 1-e Of birds or insects: A migration or issuing forth in bodies.
1832 Lyell Princ. Geol. II. 114 A similar flight [of butterflies] at the end of the last century is recorded by M. Louch.



#5547 08/27/2000 8:18 PM
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Ignoring all the things I should be doing this afternoon, I went to the web in quest of the answer to this question.

When I went to the site for The Lepidopterists' Society,
I saw that one of the committee members who established their rules for collecting lives right here in Louisville.
(This is an international committee.)

So I called him! He said, "There is none". No official group name, though if many are flying together, they are sometimes called a migration.


#5548 08/28/2000 5:01 AM
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Now that you mention it, Jackie, a cloud of butterflies does sound familiar ...

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#5549 08/23/2001 3:04 PM
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[oh, what the hell...]

<< collective noun for butterflies >>

The North American Butterfly Association uses "swarm of butterflies". Collective Noun collectors seem to prefer "rabble of butterflies". de gustibus non est disputandum



#5550 08/23/2001 3:41 PM
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I suggest a Flutter of Butterflies, When a baby, my younger son Spoonerized butterfly as flutterby. I rather like it myself, yes, even better than flury, swarm and "rabble" ! rabble is *not* for butterflies ... sorry tsuwm.
I Googled the society and made my bid with them, via email, for A Flutter of Butterflies" ... it is a very pretty and informative site.

#5551 08/23/2001 4:36 PM
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>sorry tsuwm

no need to be -- they're not *my words. (this is the thanks I get for dredging up year-old threads....)
-joe (i am not thin-skinned) bfstplk

http://rinkworks.com/words/collective.shtml
http://www.biconet.com/lures/Flutterby.html


#5552 08/23/2001 4:39 PM
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How interesting that Rhu's first post was a response to the first, last and only post of Tim_Morton. It seems Biblical somehow.


#5553 08/23/2001 4:42 PM
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well, Tim didn't exhibit biblical patience, that's for certain.


#5554 08/23/2001 4:49 PM
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I found a collective noun for butterflies, but I think it stinks: a rabble of butterflies. A flutterby of butterflies would be a bit more descriptive.


#5555 08/23/2001 5:05 PM
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wow (and bill (and all you rabble)),

many of these collective nouns are not just fanciful, but rather have some etymological basis. to wit, the first sense of rabble:

†1. A pack, string, swarm (of animals). Obs.
13+ Gaw. & Gr. Knt. 1703 [The dogs] runnen forth in a rabel. Ibid. 1899 Renaud com+& alle þe rabel+ryŠt at his helez. 1513 Douglas Æneis xi. ix. 29 The rawk vocit swannis in a rabyll. a1529 Skelton P. Sparowe 1313 He brought out a rable Of coursers and rounses. 1591 Sylvester Du Bartas i. v. 909 Flies, Butterflies, Gnats, Bees, and all the rabbles Of other Insects.

-joe (i am a member of the rabble in good standing) friday

2. a. A tumultuous crowd or array of people, a disorderly assemblage, a mob.

...and an array of butterflies is certainly a disorderly assemblage.

#5556 08/23/2001 5:19 PM
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Your explication of "rabble" is as usual entirely sound. However, "rabble" just does not to me in any way suggest the beauty or behaviour of butterflies.


#5557 08/23/2001 7:35 PM
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If this is a question of first impression, I'd vote for "flutter".
However, it must be admitted that a poster framed on my wall, collecting such terms, says "a rabble of butterflies". (Googling this term produced many lists that include it, but I've found none that cites a primary authority.)

note to paulb: I too checked Lipton's book, without success. However, Lipton cites The Book of St. Albans, 1486, as the seminal authority. Any idea how to find that, or any reprint, to check for butterflies? My weak googling skills aren't up to the task.


#5558 08/24/2001 11:32 AM
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Hi Keiva:

re Book of St Albans: We may have to ask one of our English colleagues to check out the original edition which should be in either the British Library or the Bodleian Library. Any takers?



#5559 08/24/2001 2:15 PM
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Since they are apparently not Congregational, perhaps you would call them a catholic (small c) of butterflies.



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#5560 08/24/2001 3:02 PM
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Welcome to the board, Tim! A timely query. Here in Cape May, New Jersey, we are descended upon every Fall by swarms of migrating monarch butterflies (we always called them swarms), they love the nectar of a certain kind of goldenrod that flourishes on the dunes and sandy soil here (along with milkweed), and it's always an inspiring sight to see the beauty of thousands of orange monarchs draped over the yellow blossoms along the beach! We always said "swarms" here...but I like "flutter" the best of all the suggestions posted here! Migration clusters...hmmm, "cluster"...we use that sometimes, too...can number up to the millions, I think, on their way to the mountains of Mexico and a certain new wintering spot in Florida (though not large enough to sustain the monarchs if they continue to lose their Mexican habitat). I have the figures somewhere...I'll post them when I can be more exact. I attended a Monarch seminar last year at The Wetlands Institute here given by a scientist who is the foremost expert/researcher on Monarch butterflies, so I'm sure the proper term is somewhere in the literature I filed from it. I'll look and get back if I find it.


#5561 08/24/2001 4:22 PM
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a response to the first, last and only post of Tim_Morton.

Tim was just a flutterby, never a part of our rabble.


#5562 08/24/2001 4:27 PM
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>A timely query

yes; well it was, after all, an anniversary thing.


#5563 08/24/2001 4:32 PM
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Hi Paulb:
re Book of St. Albans: We may have to ask one of our English colleagues to check out the original edition
An original may not help; I gather it's in a very ornate, hard-to-read print. More art than writing. A transcription though? (Beineke Rare Book Library at Yale may have one, but I can't seem to get it loaded up.)

Apparently the Book of St. Albans was quite significant: my info is that it's repeatedly discussed in histories of printing, and that OED cites it over 800 times. So something should be available.


#5564 08/24/2001 4:44 PM
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what a terrific notion -- a theme week of words from The Book of St. Albans! thanx.

"It is agluttyd and kelyd wyth the glette that she hath engendred."


#5565 08/24/2001 5:26 PM
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a theme week of words from The Book of St. Albans! thanx. "It is agluttyd and kelyd wyth the glette that she hath engendred."

Oy! My head aches already.



#5566 08/24/2001 10:38 PM
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Maybe Tim is still waiting patiently for us to notice that he hasn't been back.


#5567 08/25/2001 11:37 AM
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Was it something I said, I wonder?

I've noticed the same thing at parties - someone asks a question and I start to give an answer: ten minutes later, I'm ther, standing on my own. It makes you wonder why people ask, if they're not interested in the - -

Oh, Well! I might as well head back to the drinks table.




#5568 08/25/2001 1:34 PM
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In reply to:

The Book of St. Albans, 1486, as the seminal authority. Any idea how to find that, or any reprint, to check for butterflies?


Should any AWADer have one hundred and fifty pounds to spare:

http://www.justbooks.co.uk/asp/collectables/col_result.asp?cus_ID=317&src=col

See under Berners for a Victorian reprint of the Book of St. Albans.

PS. I googled with Albans hunting hawking

PPS. If I've understood this entry correctly, a microfiche copy is available somewhere in Chicago. Is there a University of Chicago?

http://cofc.edu/MARION/ABQ-9752

Bingley



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#5569 08/25/2001 1:48 PM
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When yowre hawke is encombred in the bowillis+hir Eighen will be derke and she will looke ungladli.
-Bk. of St. Albans, Hawking


#5570 08/25/2001 1:55 PM
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and she will looke ungladli

Ungladly: that is such a wonderful word, it deserves a resurrection, I think - don't you?


#5571 08/25/2001 3:52 PM
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If I've understood this entry correctly, a microfiche copy is available somewhere in Chicago. Is there a University of Chicago?

Yes, there is: reasonably near me (and my alma mater). If need be, I'll see if they'll let me peruse.



#5572 08/25/2001 4:07 PM
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If I've understood this entry correctly, a microfiche copy is available somewhere in Chicago. Is there a University of Chicago?

the link you gave is to a College of Charleston web site. the entry, I think, indicates the genesis of their "Microfiche. Chicago, Ill. : Library Resources, inc."


#5573 08/25/2001 9:59 PM
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Oh, heavens. Let's not confuse the University of Chicago and the College of Charleston; we'll end up with maroon cougars, which just can't be good.


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