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#45740 10/24/01 05:00 PM
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In an article on anthropology, I ran into a word appropriate for upcoming holiday.
not in dictionaries I have access to, but easy to guess: "guising"
Let's have some others.


#45741 10/24/01 05:46 PM
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#45742 10/24/01 05:56 PM
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Nope, it's a slightly technical word for "masquerading" for ritual purposes.
But when I looked, I found it in a timely advertisement. (Halloween masks)

That one was fairly easy. Here's a tougher one: Who was Grimr?


#45743 10/24/01 06:51 PM
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That's Grimpr's wife!


#45744 10/24/01 06:56 PM
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#45745 10/24/01 07:08 PM
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"Grimr" was said to be one of Odin or Wotan's other names, meaning "Masked Man".

Here's a real toughie: What does "excamation" mean? Probably pretty much a technical term.


#45746 10/25/01 12:25 AM
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The origin of "Trick or Treat"

The secular tradition of trick-or-treating has its roots in both the pagan and
Christian holidays. The practice can be traced to the original Halloween, known
as Samhain, an ancient Celtic New Year's festival during which human and
animal sacrifices were made to the Lord of the Dead and the sun. During
Samhain, after offering a feast to the dead, masked and costumed villagers
representing the souls of the dead paraded to the outskirts of town leading the
ghosts away. In medieval times, Christians dressed as their favorite saints for the
All Hallows procession.

There is also a possible connection with Guy Fawkes celebrations of
post-Renaissance England. In these, children dressed up as the executed
conspirator to beg "a penny for the Guy" from passing strangers. A traditional
Irish custom on Samhain eve was the soliciting of contributions in the name of
Muck Olla, a shadowy Druidic figure who would be sure to wreak vengeance on
the ungenerous. Muck Olla's vengeance gradually became transformed into the
tricks of disappointed human revelers.

Now a word question: How in Sam Hill is "Samhain" pronounced?





#45747 10/25/01 07:29 AM
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#45748 10/25/01 08:21 AM
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Pronunciation of Samhain is dead tricky. It's one of those that I read in my book on Irish and practise a few times, never sure that I've got it right.

I think it's "sow in", as in the pig family are knocking at the door so let the sow in, but with a nasalized w. Yup, a nasalized w. That's modern Irish. The mutated m was earlier a nasalized v.


#45749 10/25/01 11:47 AM
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Hey, if you can umlaut it you can nasalize it. I always thought of it as a voiced bilabial fricative but then I was just guessing.

Guy Fawkes Day - Nov 5. Interesting that it is closer to the real* cross quarter day than our modern dating of Halloween/All Saints' Eve-Day.

*Real as in strict count from solstice to equinox (Nov 5/6 this year).


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