AWADmail Issue 227
September 17, 2006
A Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day
and Other Interesting Tidbits about Words and Languages
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From: Anu Garg (garg wordsmith.org)
Subject: Interesting stories from the net
Latvians cry 'fowl' over Microsoft Vista:
http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=34236
Politicians Fall in Love with 'Word Bites':
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6073448
'Oldest' New World writing found:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5347080.stm
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From: Anu Garg (garg wordsmith.org)
Subject: Online chat
What do you call someone from Cambridge? Or someone from Zimbabwe?
Join us for a chat about words for people from various places.
Paul Dickson, author of the book "Labels for Locals" will be our guest.
Where: http://wordsmith.org/chat
When: Sep 26, 2006, 7 pm Pacific (GMT -7)
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From: Bill Mundt (wmundt monticellopro.net)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--boodle
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/boodle.html
Boodle: The meaning to a West Point cadet is completely different. It is an
out-of-messhall goodie, especially ice cream. In fact, the store where the
'boodle' is gotten is the Boodlers! The only out-of-the-ordinary fact about
boodle is that is after hours of the mess hall. No illegality at all.
Cheers, William E. Mundt, M.D. West Point 1949
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From: Maggie (smags aol.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--boodle
One of my favorite authors, Carl Hiaasen, makes use of this word extensively
in his book Sick Puppy. One of the main characters is a professional
lobbyist, and receives as a "thank you gift" from a client, a trained
Labrador. He cleverly names the dog Boodle. Seeing this entry from you made
me smile!
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From: Liz Alewine (liz.alewine comcast.net)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--paisano
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/paisano.html
In Texas, and perhaps more of the Southwest, this term also means a large
bird others call "roadrunner", and unlike in the cartoons, he doesn't beep,
but he is graceful and fast on the ground. I grew up in Fort Worth, Texas
("where the west begins" was our city motto), and paisanos were frequent
sights on hilly residential streets and ambles through fields.
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From: Philip Viener (keeperv att.net)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--skosh
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/skosh.html
There's a "little" (pardon) more to the story of skosh coming into slang
usage...
I first heard the word while serving in the US Air Force in 1971, but it
had been part of the military vocabulary long before that. Asking around
about the origination of "skosh" got me several answers - first, that it
came back from Viet Nam with returning GIs, and two (the more likely) that
it was adopted by those who served in the occupation forces in Japan after
World War II.
Around the same time I was flying a desk, Northrop Grumman, the aircraft
manufacturer, was trying to sell to foreign countries the F-5, a fighter
version of its exceptional T-38 jet trainer. Northrop had given it some
properly aggressive name, but everyone called it the "Skoshi Tiger", because
it was smaller and lighter than the other fighter aircraft in the inventory.
(Side note for film buffs: the F-5 has a cameo in Francis Ford Coppola's
"Apocalypse Now").
I knew "skosh" was with us forever -- and no longer military property --
around 1975, when I heard a Levi's jeans radio commercial for a new pant
designed for the (ahem) more mature Levi's wearer. According to the
announcer, these Levi's gave you a "skosh more room" in certain areas.
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From: Richard Rosol (rrosol verizon.net)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--goombah
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/goombah.html
In the field of medicine, goombah has entered the slang lexicon to mean a
troublesome mass--cancerous or otherwise--lurking in some organ, disrupting
the organ's function. One might say something like, "If we scan his chest,
what do you wanna bet there'll be some goombah crowding out his right upper
lobe?" The term serves as a nonspecific alternative to the boring,
Catholic-sounding "mass", while injecting the flippant irreverence so
pervasive in medicine.
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From: Brian Seitz (wholok gmail.com)
Subject: goombah
It's also notable that the mushroom-looking Super Mario Bros. (a video game)
enemies are called goombas.
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From: Frank Siraguso (fsiraguso kumc.edu)
Subject: goombah
I heard my dad and his friends (his compares) use this term a million
times, but have never seen it spelled out. In their Sicilian dialect
(he and they we born in the U.S., but their parents were mostly from
Sicily) they pronounced it "goombody" with the accent on the last
syllable. It was a term of endearment, used to mean a close friend. I
never called my godfather by that term. I called him "purino", which
sounded like "burino", and, in the same vein, called my godmother
"burina".
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From: Megan Jefferies (meganjefferies cgsi.us)
Subject: A.Word.A.Day--goombah
I'm reminded of this song:
"Hey goomba I love how you dance the rumba
But take some advice paisano, learn-a how to mambo.
If you're gonna be a square you ain't-a gonna go nowhere."
Dean Martin, Mambo Italiano.
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From: Francesco Martinelli (fmartinelli tin.it)
Subject: Re: Goombah
In Naples or around, this is in general usage between friends, besides
its proper definition. With a wink, "compare" and "comare" can get the
meaning of lover, especially extramarital; the "commare secca" or
"dried-up godmother" is Death.
But there it is pronounced "cumpa'" (changing the "o" in "u" and losing the
final "re") and the southern "c" and "p" are sweeter, sounding like "g" and
"b": "gumba" or, in phonetic American spelling, "goombah"!
The real mafioso are not spoken about, so there's hardly a word for them.
"Amici" is the word actually used, but in Sicily they have the wonderful
expression "uomini de panza" ("men with belly") for local VIPs.
In Turkey we say "gobeksiz erkek balkonsuz eve benzer" or "a man without
a belly is like a house without a balcony"!
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From: Susan Marr (smarr msrs.org)
Subject: A.Word.A.Day--goombah
What a delight this week has been. Goombah and paisano remind me of my
days of living in Rhode Island. The Federal Hill ("the hill") region of
Providence is well known for its Italian heritage. A very dear friend
grew up in the area. He continually "warned" me about going up on the
hill without my passport or him along as a reference.
Wouldn't you know. We went up there one day for lunch where we ran
into a friend of his. His friend turned to me and asked for my
passport. My buddy told him "She's with me." That made it all okay.
Of course this was all in jest, but what delightful times I had with this
friend. My favorite expression was "agita", very roughly translated to
"it rubs the wrong way" or a bad feeling in the stomach. Apparently I was
a constant source of his agita, as in "You give me agita."
............................................................................
Here is where people, / One frequently finds, / Lower their voices / And
raise their minds. -Richard Armour, author, on libraries (1906-1989)
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