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#126480 03/30/04 05:43 PM
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Raggedman, are you watching Deadwood on HBO? "Squarehead" has been used on there a few times in reference to a murdered Swedish family.The story takes place in the 1870s, and I think the language reflects usage at that time. This suggests that the word doesn't derive from WW1 military wear.


#126481 03/30/04 05:43 PM
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Thanks, jheem - Schädel is a word I had not ecountered before. One more for my vocabulary.

But at least my first intuition was right for square.


#126482 03/30/04 06:25 PM
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But at least my first intuition was right for square.

When you start square, you finish square, RhubarbCommando.

I haven't been around for awhile, but it's a good way for anyone to start.




#126483 03/30/04 11:22 PM
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The definition (not my own) I offered in this very thread said that the term is known from the late 19th century and could refer to Scandinavians, too.


#126484 03/30/04 11:29 PM
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You're welcome. Schädel is cognate with our word skull. Yes, Quadrat means square: two words that come to mind are Quadratmeter 'square meter' )used in measuring houses) and Quadratpapier 'graph paper'.


#126485 03/30/04 11:35 PM
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Welcome upstatekaren. That's a good observation (and quite timely). How did they use the term squarehead in the documentary, or was it in a movie?

(Is HBO just movies? We don't get that here.)


#126486 03/31/04 12:31 AM
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I had to laugh when I saw the thread title... the term "squarehead" is quite common in the area where I live. It's usually heard as "Dutchy squarehead" and is used to refer to all of the stubborn Pennsylvania Dutchmen (and women, myself included!) who live here in Pennsylvania Dutch country.


#126487 03/31/04 12:34 AM
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But why though, Rapunzel?


#126488 03/31/04 12:40 AM
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But why though, Rapunzel?

I've always assumed that it referred to our stubborn "block-headedness." But that's just an assumption.




#126489 03/31/04 03:13 PM
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I guess it has as much to do with thoughtless racial stereotyping as anything.
Many north-europeans have cranial dimensions that are (more-or-less) equal in yaw, roll and pitch directions (x-threading madly!!)so can be seen as "square" - albeit with rounded corners (and, pedantically-speaking, it would really be a "cube")

but that's how racial stereotyping goes - a rough approximation to a small percentage of the actual reality.


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