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#14589 01/04/01 08:54 AM
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I'm sure "send all good" isn't an old-fashioned commercial locution: that's got to be a typo for goods.

These phrases (another is "accounts receivable") have an air of law-French about them, with the postposed adjective. In "goods inward" the second word is probably an adverb contracted from a longer phrase, but nowadays we'd transform it to an adjective and say "inward goods" when we contracted it.


#14590 01/04/01 01:12 PM
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The complete sentence was: Although I have moved, our good inwards is still at my old address.


#14591 01/04/01 09:51 PM
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The complete sentence was: Although I have moved, our good inwards is still at my old address.

Ok, I understand. This person is referring to a group of paintings akin to the controversial piece on display in New York City featuring a fetidly decorated Virgin Mary. The writer obviously meant to say "innards" but made a typo. He is saying that he has one of these paintings that he likes, and it's still at his old residence.


#14592 01/06/01 01:11 AM
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Do you think he meant the receiving desk or dock?


#14593 01/06/01 05:27 AM
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Seeing as nobody has added the 3rd option, thought I just might... "Goods Inwards" - ie implying pluralty and direction. Seen signs (signage?) with this on numerous businesses. "Goods Inward" would be the most common form though.

"Receipts", "Receivals", "Receiving Dock", "Deliveries" etc - all valid substitutes.

stales


#14594 01/06/01 11:27 PM
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Isn't this amazing? People all over the world are puzzling over an unknown someone's message! Way cool!
I'm inclined to think your customer made a typo, F., because of the repetition of it. It sounds to me like he is meaning, "This is where deliveries should be sent".

Now--Nick (say so if you don't like that shortening), you used two terms I've never heard before: law-French, and
postposed. Postposed I can tell from the context, but that brings up the question that came to mind in the post that suggested 'good inwards' ought to be 'goods inward': is there a word for this? It isn't a spoonerism, is it, when the last letters of words are transposed?


#14595 01/08/01 12:12 PM
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Now--Nick (say so if you don't like that shortening)
Well I don't complain, but it's not my name. I never use it.

Law-French: the continuance of Norman French in legal and administrative terms, with characteristics such as N A combinations with plural Ns A, as court(s) martial, governor(s) general, durance vile, even malice aforethought; and infinitives in -er as nouns, such as rejoinder, misnomer, demurrer, and many others I can't think of too numerous to mention; and actual French phrases such as mort d'ancestor and lese-majesty, which should not be given their modern French prounciation.

Tail-end spoonerism: I don't think it's just a phonetic thing, but it has undergone several stages of unconscious grammatical reanalysis, along these lines:

-- "goods inward" is a single lexical item
-- it's plural
-- so it must end in -s
-- it only has one s
-- so it must be "good inwards"
-- and that sounds okay, as if analogical with "good news", "good intentions"


#14596 01/08/01 01:30 PM
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Although I have moved, our good inwards is still at my old address
Maybe this correspondent's road to hell is paved with goods intentions?

But I think Jazz's explanation (as usual) is probably nearest to the mark


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