I Never Knew There Was a Word For It
Page 30
budgie smugglers (Australian slang) tight-fitting swimming trunks
TREWS
But even slinging on a pair of trousers may not stop the ogling:
like Edgware Road (UK slang 20C) a phrase describing tight trousers (because it’s got no ballroom either)
continuations (1825) trousers (since they continued a Victorian male’s waistcoat in a direction too delicate to mention)
galligaskins (1577) loose breeches
spatterdashes (1687) coverings for the legs by which the wet is kept off (especially in riding)
gravity-bags (Westmorland) the seat of the trousers
yorks (Wales) the practice of tying colliers’ and other workmen’s trousers above the ankles to prevent dirt and dust from reaching the upper parts of the body
GYM SHOES
Here at home we mainly call them trainers these days. But around the country and the English-speaking world the slang varies widely. In Newcastle they’re known as sandshoes; in Liverpool gollies; in Bristol and into Wales daps; in Nottingham pumps; in London plimsolls; in Dublin whiteslippers; and in Belfast gutties. Other types of footwear vary widely:
ferryboat (US 20C) a large, clumsy shoe
cod-heads (Glasgow 1930s) shoes that have worn out at the toe
done-promote (Jamaican English 1943) sandals made from worn out car tyres (i.e. one has been promoted from bare feet)
excruciators (19C) very tight, pointed shoes (forerunners of the 20C winklepickers)
KITTED OUT
Some occupations leave little choice as to what you wear:
lightning conductors (Royal Navy jargon) gold stripes running down the trouser seams of a Captain’s or Flag Officer’s Mess Dress uniform
devil’s claw (c.1850) the broad arrow on convicts’ uniform
fruit salad (Service slang) a large collection of medal ribbons which runs to three or more rows
SUITS YOU
There are all kinds of useful names for specific parts of clothing. Imagine how much easier life could be if you could define which pocket your keys are kept in or why exactly you have to turn down that fourth helping of turkey …
gerve (US late 19C) the breast-pocket in a jacket
britch (US late 19C) the inside jacket pocket
coppish (Glamorgan) the part of the trousers that have buttons in front
slave (US military slang) the part of a garment covering an arm only
yule-hole (Scots b.1911) the last hole to which a man could stretch his belt at a Christmas feast
REBELS IN BOATERS
Boys at Winchester College developed a rich lingo to describe how they wore their uniform. You could sport …
a fringe (1920) to allow the bottom of one’s gown to become tattered
an advertisement (1892) to turn down the collar of a College gown to show the velvet
an angle (1920) to wear your straw hat crooked
Or more precisely:
a halo (1920) to have your hat tilted like a halo so that the hair was showing in front
PERUKE
Looking round at all the shaven heads and brillos of today, perhaps men should consider a return to something that was once an essential accessory, even if the language used to describe it was somewhat less than heroic:
cauliflower (1753) a large white wig, such as is worn by the dignified clergy and formerly by physicians
dildo (1688) a cylindrical or ‘sausage’ curl on a wig
caxon (1756) a worn-out wig
Nazarene foretop (1785) the foretop of a wig made in imitation of Christ’s head of hair, as represented by the painters and sculptors
TOPPING
Or else, fly in the face of contemporary fashion and sport some other headgear:
liripipe (1737) the long tail of a graduate’s hood
cow’s breakfast (Canadian slang) a large straw hat
gibus (1848) an opera or crush hat
havelock (1861) a cloth hanging from the back of a soldier’s cap to protect his neck from the sun
biggin (1530) a tight-fitting cap tied under the chin, usually worn by children or as a nightcap by men
goodgodster (Winchester College 1920) a brown bowler hat (from the exclamation necessarily uttered by anyone seeing so strange a thing)
WORD JOURNEYS
corset (14C from Latin and Old French) a little body
mitten (14C from Old French) divided in the middle
garter (14C from Old French) the bend in the knee
tuxedo (from Amerindian) a wolf; then the name of a lake near New York whose residents in 1886 became so socially important that its name was given to a new style of dinner coats
GOING WEST
Illness, death and
spiritual matters
Sicknesse doth wound or afflict the flesh,
but it cures the soule
(1624)
The idealized body is all very well to look at, in a painting or beautiful photograph. But in life, of course, bodies are constantly working organisms, managing repetitive functions that we often try and pretend are not actually happening to us. Just look at the string of euphemisms for our regular trips to the loo or restroom. We go and check the price of wheat in Chicago (Fife), see the vicar and book a seat for evensong (Isle of Wight), shake the dew from one’s orchid (Cumbria) or wring out one’s socks (Kent).
WIND AND WATER
Related functions can cause us huge embarrassment, as we attempt to ignore the fact that air needs to be released or that sometimes the body will reject what we try and put into it:
fluff (Yorkshire) to break wind silently
dumb insolence (1916) breaking wind on parade
thorough cough (b.1811) coughing and breaking wind backwards at the same time
bespawl (Tudor–Stuart) to bespatter with saliva
vurp (UK teen talk) a belching action that’s somewhere between vomiting and burping
bake it (late 19C) to refrain from visiting the loo when one should go there
ELF WARNING
Nor, sadly, can we rely on the body always to be in tip-top condition:
phthisickin (Essex) a slight, tickling cough
waff (1808) just the slightest touch of illness (especially of a cold)
aelfsogooa (Anglo-Saxon) a hiccough, thought to have been caused by elves
blepharospasm (1872) uncontrollable winking galea (1854) a headache which covers the entire head like a helmet mubble-fubbles (1589) a fit of depression
sirkenton (Ayrshire) one who is very careful to avoid pain or cold and keeps near the fire
MENS SANA
Though sometimes malfunction of the body has more to do with the mind that controls it …
formication (1707) the sensation of bugs crawling over one’s body
trichotillomania (1889) the compulsive desire to pull out one’s hair
boanthropy (1864) the belief that one is an ox
uranomania (1890) the delusion that one is of Heavenly descent
calenture (1593) a distemper peculiar to sailors in hot climates, where they imagine the sea to be green fields, and will throw themselves into it
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
Calling in professional assistance is sure to be a good plan, even if the treatment prescribed may sometimes seem a bit unusual:
urtication (1837) the act of whipping a palsied or benumbed limb with nettles to restore its feeling
bezoar (1580) a stone from a goat’s stomach considered a universal antidote to poisons
organ recital (medical jargon) a detailing of one’s medical history (especially of a hypochondriac’s)
emporiatrics (medical terminology) the science of travellers’ health (jet lag, exotic infections, overexposure to hot or cold, altitude sickness etc.)
GOD KNOWS
Irreverent medical acronyms are used by some doctors on patients’ charts:
UBI Unexplained Beer Injury
PAFO Pissed And Fell Over
GORK God Only Reall
y Knows (a hospital patient who is, and may well remain, comatose)
TEETH Tried Everything Else, Try Homeopathy
GPO Good for Parts Only
It has been known that certain medics use the letters O and Q to describe their very oldest patients, with respectively, their mouths open, and their tongues out.
PULLING THROUGH
The sad fact remains that in the lottery of illness, some are fortunate …
umbersorrow (Scotland) hardy, resisting disease or the effects of severe weather
lysis (1877) the gradual reduction of the symptoms of a disease
to cheat the worms (b.1887) to recover from a serious illness
creaking gate (1854) an invalid who outlives an apparently healthier person (as a creaking gate hangs longest on the hinges)
… while others are less so (whatever their visitors think):
goodly-badly (Cumberland) of a sick person whose looks belie their illness
floccillation (1842) the action of a feverish patient in picking at the bedclothes during delirium
churchyard cough (1693) a cough that is likely to terminate in death
circling the drain (hospital jargon) a patient near death who refuses to give up the ghost
wag-at-the-wall (Jamaican English) a ghost that haunts the kitchen and moves backwards and forwards before the death of one of the family
LAST WORDS
Your time has come, and this is a journey with no return ticket:
thanatopsis (1816) the contemplation of death
viaticum (Latin 1562) Holy Communion given to a dying person
thratch (Scotland 1806) to gasp convulsively in the death-agony
dormition (1483) a peaceful and painless death
THE GOLDEN STAIRCASE
This final action of the body is also something that people prefer not to refer to directly, as the following euphemisms for dying attest:
buy the farm (US slang early 1900s)
climb the golden staircase (US slang late 1800s)
coil up one’s ropes (British naval slang)
stick one’s spoon in the wall (British slang 1800s)
meet one’s Waterloo (Australian slang)
go trumpet-cleaning (late 19C: the trumpeter being the angel Gabriel)
chuck seven (late 19C: as a dice-cube has no 7)
drop one’s leaf (c.1820)
take the everlasting knock (1889)
pass in one’s cheeks (b.1872)
DEATH BY HONEY
Not of course that illness is the only way to go:
buddle (Somerset) to suffocate in mud
burke (1829) to smother people in order to sell their bodies for dissection (after the notorious Edinburgh body-snatchers Burke and Hare)
scaphism (b.1913) an old Persian method of executing criminals by covering them with honey and letting the sun and the insects finish the job
A HEARTY JOKE
When hanging was the ultimate penalty in this country, as it was for many centuries, a particular kind of gloating black humour went along with the licensed murder of wicked people:
hemp cravat (late 18C) a hangman’s noose
to cry cockles (b.1811) to be hanged (from the noise made whilst being strangled) artichoke (underworld slang 1834) a hanging (a ‘hearty choke’)
horse’s nightcap (late 18C) the cap drawn over a criminal’s eyes at his hanging (also known as
Paddington spectacles (early 19C) from the execution of malefactors at Tyburn in the above parish)
keep an ironmonger’s shop by the side of a common (1780) to be hanged in chains sheriff’s picture frame (UK slang b.1811) the gallows
dismal ditty (c.1690) a psalm sung by a criminal just before his death at the gallows
DUST TO DUST
However you meet your end, it’s off to church for one last time:
ecopod (UK 1994) a coffin specially designed to be environmentally friendly
shillibeer (1835) a hearse with seats for mourners wheelicruise (Orkney Isles) a churchyard
boot hill (American West 19C) a graveyard (where the occupants died ‘with their boots on’ i.e. violently)
parentate (1620) to celebrate one’s parents’ funerals
KNOCKING-ON
Not that death is necessarily the end of your consequence on earth:
dustsceawung (Anglo-Saxon) a visit to a grave (‘a viewing of dust’)
carrion-crow man (Guyanese English) a man who canvasses business for an undertaker following a death
umest (1400) the coverlet of a bed, often claimed by a priest at the death of a parishioner
to add a stone to someone’s cairn (18C) to honour a person as much as possible after their death
memorial diamond (US slang 2001) a diamond created from carbon extracted from the remains of a cremated body
deodand (1523) an object that has been the direct cause of death of a human being (such as a boat from which a person has fallen and drowned) which was forfeited to the crown to be used as an offering to God
ELYSIAN FIELDS
The spirit has most definitely left the body, but to travel who knows where? Over the centuries there have been many different answers to this fascinating question:
fiddlers’ green (1825) the place where sailors expect to go when they die: a place of fiddling, dancing, rum and tobacco
psychopannychy (1545) the sleep of the soul between death and the day of judgment
Lubberland (1598) a mythical paradise reserved for those who are lazy
GOD’S IN HIS HEAVEN
Back on earth, those left behind try and make sense of this alarming flight. Many find a visit to a church helpful in all kinds of ways …
scaldabanco (1670) a preacher who delivers a fiery sermon
utraquist (1894) one who partakes of the wine as well as the bread at communion
officers of the 52nd (b.1909) young men rigidly going to church on the 52 Sundays in a year
… though some motives are more suspect than others:
thorough churchman (b.1811) a person who goes in at one door of a church, and out at the other without stopping
autem-diver (17C) a pickpocket specializing in the robbery of church congregations
SPEAK OF THE DEVIL
God is known by few names: God, Allah, Jehovah. But his old adversary has any number of monikers: author of evil, black gentleman, fallen angel, old scratch, old split-foot and the noseless one. Just in the north-east of England he’s been Clootie, Awd Horney, Auld Nick and the Bad Man, while Yorkshire has had him as Dicky Devlin; Gloucestershire as Miffy and Suffolk as Jack-a-Dells.
THE UNCERTAIN FUTURE
Religion asks us to accept our fate, whatever that may be. For many that’s not good enough. They need more concrete assurance of the good or bad things to come:
onychomancy (1652) fortune-telling using reflected light on oiled fingernails
pessomancy (1727) divination by throwing pebbles
belomancy (1646) divination using arrows marked with symbols or questions, guidance being sought by firing the arrows or drawing them at random from a bag or quiver
planchette (French 1920s) a small, heart-shaped board on casters with a pencil attached; when participants in a séance touched it lightly the planchette allegedly wrote messages from the dead
WORD JOURNEYS
juggernaut (17C) from Hindi jagannath: a title of the god Vishnu ‘lord of the world’. It was believed that devotees of Vishnu threw themselves beneath the wheels of a cart bearing his image in procession
mortgage (14C from Old French) a death pledge, a promise to pay upon a person’s death
bask (14C) to bathe in blood
bless (Old English) to redden with blood; then to consecrate
SLAPSAUCE
Food
An apple pie without the cheese is like
the kiss without the squeeze
(1929)
British food is often unfavourably compared with the cuisines of other n
ations. But why on earth should this be?
dribble-beards (Scotland 1829) long strips of cabbage in broth
dog and maggot (UK military forces) biscuits and cheese
chussha-wagga (Worcestershire) inferior cheese
druschoch (Ayrshire) any liquid food of a nauseating appearance
HORSE FODDER
Dr Johnson famously described oats as ‘a grain which is in England given to horses, but in Scotland supports the people’. Turnips on the other hand have long sustained people on both sides of the border. In the dialect of north-east England they have been known as bagies, naggies, narkies, nashers, snadgers, snaggers, snannies, snarters, tungies and yammies. In Scotland they’re called neeps, as in bashed neeps (mashed turnips) the traditional accompaniment to haggis.
KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL
Pig-months (19C) are those months in the year which have an ‘r’ in their name: that is, all except the summer months of May, June, July or August, when it was traditionally considered unwise to eat pork (or shellfish). But however safe your ingredients, correct preparation is essential:
spitchcock (1675) to prepare an eel for the table
bonx (Essex) to beat up batter for pudding