I Never Knew There Was a Word For It

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I Never Knew There Was a Word For It Page 39

by Adam Jacot De Boinod


  THE RAIN IT RAINETH EVERYDAY …

  It may rain often but that’s not to say that there aren’t some happy aspects to the experience:

  petrichor (1964) the pleasant smell that accompanies the first rain after a dry spell

  eske (Orkney Isles) small spots of rain that precede a heavy storm

  fog dog (mid 19C) the lower part of a rainbow

  water-gall (Tudor–Stuart) a second rainbow seen above the first

  monkey’s wedding (South African 1968) simultaneous rain and sunshine

  although its less enjoyable side is also well documented …

  trashlifter (Californian slang) a heavy rain (loglifter: a really heavy rain)

  duck’s frost (Sussex dialect) cold rain rather than freezing

  New York rain (Hong Kong slang) the local term for water that drips annoyingly from air-conditioners onto passers-by

  BLOWN AWAY

  or those who live on coasts and hills, the wind has always been a constant presence:

  pipple (Tudor–Stuart) to blow with a gentle sound (of the wind)

  wyvel (Wiltshire) to blow as wind does round a corner or through a hole

  whiffle (1662) to blow, displace or scatter with gusts of air; to flicker or flutter as if blown by the wind

  not to be trifled with if you’re out on the water …

  williwaw (1842) a sudden and powerful downdraught of wind (originally in the Straits of Magellan)

  the dog before its master (nautical late 19C) a heavy swell preceding a gale

  or a storm is imminent …

  brattle (Newcastle 1815) the noise of a thunderclap

  rounce robble hobble (b.1582) a representation of the tumult of thunder

  heofonwoma (Anglo-Saxon) thunder and lightning, literally a terrible noise from heaven

  levin (13C) a bolt of lightning

  THE LIVING IS EASY

  Every now and then the sun appears, and everyone goes crazy with delight:

  apricate (1691) to bask in the sun

  crizzles (1876) rough, sunburnt places on the face and hands in scorching weather

  jack-a-dandy (Shropshire) the dancing light sometimes seen on a wall or ceiling, reflected from the sunshine on water, glass or other bright surface

  king’s-weather (Scotland 18C) the exhalations seen rising from the earth during a warm day (while queen’s weather (19C) is a fine day for a fête as Queen Victoria was famous for having fine weather when she appeared in public)

  SNOW ON THE LINE

  While at the other end of the year the country grinds to a halt for another reason:

  devil’s blanket (Newfoundland) a snowfall which hinders work or going to school

  pitchen (Bristol) snow that is settling

  cloggins (Cumberland) balls of snow on the feet

  tewtle (Yorkshire) to snow just a few flakes

  sluppra (Shetland Isles) half-melted snow

  although the novelty does often rather pass after the building of the second snowman:

  two thieves beating a rogue (b.1811) a man beating his hands against his sides to warm himself in cold weather (also known as beating the booby and cuffing Jonas)

  to beat the goose (c.1880) to strike the hands across the chest and under the armpits to warm one’s chilled fingers (the movement supposedly resembles a goose in flight)

  shrammed (Bristol) feeling really cold

  WORD JOURNEYS

  aftermath (16C) after mowing (i.e. the second crop of grass in autumn)

  derive (14C from Latin via Old French) to draw away from the river bank

  damp (14C) noxious vapour, gas; then (16C) fog, mist, depression, stupor

  sky (13C from Old Norse) a cloud

  aloof (nautical 16C) windward

  FEELIMAGEERIES

  Paraphernalia

  None are so great enemies to knowledge

  as they that know nothing at all

  (1586)

  The English language has a name for pretty much everything, even things you’ve never imagined needing to describe:

  feazings (1825) the frayed and unravelled ends of a rope

  ouch (Tudor–Stuart) the socket of a precious stone

  swarf (1566) the metallic dust that accumulates after sharpening or grinding metal

  ferrule (Dickens: Nicholas Nickleby 1838) the metal tip on an umbrella

  nittiness (1664) the condition of being full of small air bubbles

  DRIBS AND DRABS

  If that wasn’t enough, dialect supplies a few more:

  charmings (Lincolnshire) paper or rag chewed into small pieces by mice

  swailing (Rutland) wax drips from a candle

  smut (Dublin) the remains of a nearly burnt-out candle

  catamaran (Devon 1836) anything very rickety and unsafe

  swiggle (East Anglia) to shake liquid in an enclosed vessel

  noraleg (Shetland Isles 1899) a needle with a broken eye

  ROUGHLY SPEAKING

  When it comes to describing other aspects of objects, there are some surprisingly useful words out there:

  scrawmax (Lincolnshire) anything badly formed or out of shape

  ullage (1297) the amount of liquid by which a container falls short of being full

  wee-wow (Shropshire) more on one side than on the other, ill-balanced, shaky

  cattywampus (US Middle and Southern slang) diagonally across from something else

  by scowl of brow (Gloucestershire) judging by the eye instead of by measurement

  ostrobogulous (1951) unusual, bizarre, interesting

  … as there are for directions too:

  widdershins (1513) in the opposite direction, the wrong way

  deasil (1771) clockwise, or ‘in the direction of the sun’s course’ (considered by some to bring bad luck)

  antisyzgy (1863) a union of opposites

  COUNTING SHEEP

  Being able to count was a matter of survival long before education for all. Yan Tan Tethera is a numerical sequence once used widely by shepherds in northern England and southern Scotland to count their sheep. It was also used in knitting to count stitches. The words differ according to accent and locale (in the Lake District versions alter according to which valley you find yourself in). In Westmorland it goes like this:

  Yan · Tahn · Teddera · Meddera · Pimp (5) · Settera · Lettera · Hovera · Dovera · Dick (10) · Yan Dick · Tahn Dick · Teddera Dick · Meddera Dick · Bumfit (15) · Yan-a-Bumfit · Tahn-a Bumfit · Teddera-Bumfit · Meddera-Bumfit · Jiggot (20)

  The monotonous nature of the rhyme, which would have been repeated many times during the day, also supposedly gave rise to the idea of ‘counting sheep’ in order to get off to sleep.

  WHO WANTS TO BE A VIGINTILLIONAIRE?

  When numbers give way to mathematics, things start to get a bit more daunting:

  zenzizenzizenzic (1557) the eighth power of a number

  lemniscate (1781) the ∞ or ‘infinity’ symbol

  preantepenult (1791) the fourth last

  shake a unit of time equal to a hundred-millionth of a second (from top secret operations during the Second World War based on the expression ‘two shakes of a lamb’s tail’, indicating a very short time interval)

  vigintillion (1857) the number expressed as a one followed by sixty-three zeros

  EVEN STEVENS

  Colloquial English takes delight in rhyming expressions, offcially known as Reduplicative Rhyming Compounds:

  nibby-gibby (Cornwall 1854) touch and go

  winky-pinky (Yorkshire) a nursery word for sleepy

  hockerty-cockerty (Scotland 1742) with one leg on each shoulder

  inchy-pinchy (Warwickshire) the boy’s game of progressive leapfrog

  fidge-fadge (Yorkshire) a motion between walking and trotting

  boris-noris (Dorset) careless, reckless, happy-go-lucky

  wiffle-waffle (Northamptonshire) to whet one’s scythes together

  Shropshire, in particular, has some fine examp
les:

  aunty-praunty (Ellesmere) high-spirited, proud

  bang-swang (Clee Hills) without thought, headlong

  holus-bolus impulsively, without deliberation

  opple-scopple (Clun) to scramble for sweets as children do

  This is not just a local phenomenon, as these transatlantic modern versions demonstrate:

  stitch ’n’ bitch sewing or knitting while exchanging malicious gossip

  denture venturer a long trip away from work pre-retirement

  chop shop a stolen car disassembly place

  zero-hero the designated driver: someone who doesn’t drink alcohol at a social gathering etc. to drive those who do drink home safely

  YOUR NUMBER’S UP

  In the drugstores of 1930s America, staff often found it easier to talk in numerical code about certain sensitive matters:

  13 a boss is roaming

  14 a special order

  86 we’re out of what was just ordered; to refuse to serve a customer

  87½ a pretty woman just walked in

  95 a customer is walking out without paying

  98 the manager is here

  MMMMM …

  We all know there are twenty-six letters in the alphabet. But don’t think that’s the end of it:

  izzard (Swift 1738) an archaic name for Z

  lambdoidal (1653) shaped like the letter L

  tittle (1538) the little dot above the letter i (it’s also the name for a pip on dice)

  hyoid (1811) having a U shape

  octothorpe (US 1960s) the offcial name of the ‘#’ (aka the hash mark)

  annodated (b.1913) anything bent somewhat like the letter S (from heraldry)

  mytacism (b.1913) the incorrect or excessive use of the letter M

  NEVER ODD OR EVEN: PALINDROMES

  The English word palindrome was coined by the playwright Ben Jonson in around 1629 to describe words that read the same forwards as backwards; an ongoing source of fun with phrases too:

  no, it is opposition

  Niagara, o roar again!

  rats live on no evil star

  nurse, I spy gypsies, run!

  murder for a jar of red rum

  harass sensuousness, Sarah

  a man, a plan, a canal, Panama

  sums are not set as a test on Erasmus

  sir, I demand - I am a maid named Iris

  a new order began, a more Roman age bred Rowena

  SOUND EFFECTS

  Noises sometimes seem to defy description. But not in this language:

  fremescence (Thomas Carlyle 1837) an incipient roaring

  rimbombo (1873) a booming roar

  cloop (1848) drawing a cork from a bottle

  amphoric (1839) the hollow sound produced by blowing across the mouth of a bottle

  wheep (Kipling: Life’s Hand 1891) a steel weapon when drawn from a sheath

  callithumpian (1836) a big parade, usually accompanied by a band of discordant instruments

  rip-rap (1894) fireworks detonating

  swabble (1848) water being sloshed around

  crepitation (1656) the crackling and popping sound of a wood fire

  jarg (1513) the creaking of a door or gate

  juck-cum-peng (Jamaican English 1943) a wooden-legged person walking

  whiffle (1972) a soft sound as of gently moving air or water

  TINCTURE

  We can all name the primary colours: red, yellow and blue; not to mention the secondaries: purple, green and orange; after that, it’s anyone’s guess:

  gamboge (1634) bright yellow (from gum-resin)

  fulvous (1664) tawny, yellow tinged with red

  ianthine (1609) violet coloured

  glaucous (1671) a pale green passing into greyish blue

  nacreous (1841) a pearly lustre

  lyard (Chaucer c.1386) silvery grey almost white

  VERY FLAT, NORFOLK

  Dialects have their own words for colour, often reflecting the landscapes they come from:

  blake (Cumberland) a yellowish golden colour

  bazzom (Newfoundland) purplish tint, heather-coloured; of flesh, blue or discoloured

  watchet (Midlands 1891) light blue

  dunduckytimur (Norfolk and Suffolk) a dull, indescribable colour

  UP BETIMES

  Time waits for no man. So we might as well be certain precisely what we mean:

  ughten (971) the dusk just before dawn

  blue o’clock in the morning (1886) pre-dawn, when black sky gives way to purple

  beetle-belch (RAF jargon) an ungodly hour

  sparrow-fart (b.1910) daybreak, very early morning

  beever (Sussex) eleven o’clock luncheon

  upright and downstraight (Sussex) bedtime when the clock says six

  blind-man’s-holiday (Shropshire) twilight

  cockshut (1594) evening time

  PROVIDENTIAL

  If you want something to come off well, choose your date with care:

  Egyptian day (Yorkshire) an unlucky day, a Friday, which was a day of abstinence

  pully-lug day (Cumberland 1886) a day on which traditionally ears might be pulled with impunity

  cucumber time (b.1810) the quiet season in the tailoring trade (hence the expression tailors are vegetarians as they live on cucumber when without work)

  Saint Tibb’s Eve (Cornwall) a day that never comes

  when hens make holy water (1631) never

  THINGUMMY

  When all is said and done, however, there are just some things that remain very hard to put your finger on:

  oojiboo (1918) an unnamed thing, a whatsit

  feelimageeries (Scotland 1894) knick-knacks, odds and ends

  hab nab (1580) at random, at the mercy of chance, hit or miss

  gazodjule (Australian slang) a name for an object of which one cannot remember the name

  floccinaucinihilipilification (1741) the categorizing of something that is useless or trivial

  WORD JOURNEYS

  point-blank (16C from French) a white spot (as in a target)

  punctual (14C from Latin) pertinent to a point or dot

  normal (17C from Latin via French) rectangular, perpendicular

  paraphernalia (17C from Ancient Greek) articles of personal property which the law allows a married woman to regard as her own

  algebra (14C from Arabic via Medieval Latin) the reunion of broken parts

  * Obviously, not to be confused with hangouderen (Dutch), pensioners who have nothing to do but hang around in considerable numbers in shopping malls and hamburger bars (literally, hanging elderly)

  * Slang that works when read or written backwards

 

 

 


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