If archaic words are the grizzled veterans of a language, slang terms
are its feisty teenagers. These are words that are not afraid to experiment,
twist, turn, blend, and innovate with language.

Since slang is often born on the gritty streets of language, those words
often don't get recorded in a birth register in the form of printed
citations. So their origins are hard to pin down.

We do have the origins of all of this week's slang though, as they all 
are based on words from foreign languages. This week let's look at slang
originating in words from Dutch, Spanish, Japanese, and Italian.


boodle (BOOD-l) noun

   An illegal payment, as in graft.

verb intr.

   To take money dishonestly, especially from graft.

[From Dutch boedel (property).]

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=boodle

-Anu Garg (garg wordsmith.org)

  "100 years ago, June 2, 1905: [Several senators and representatives]
   were arrested yesterday on charges growing out of the alleged boodling
   operations in the last general assembly."
   Other Days; Arkansas Democrat-Gazette; Jun 2, 2005.

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............................................................................
We win justice quickest by rendering justice to the other party. -Mohandas
K. Gandhi (1869-1948)

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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/boodle.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/boodle.ram

Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/boodle.html

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