Guest Wordsmith John (Ol' Chumbucket) Baur (chumbucketATtalklikeapirate.com)
writes:

Every September 19 people around the world celebrate International Talk Like
a Pirate Day. It's been marked on all continents -- even Antarctica. Why?
Because it's fun, it's anarchic. Its very whimsy -- trying to get everyone
on the planet to talk like a stereotypical Caribbean buccaneer on the same
day each year -- sets it apart from other holidays.

The holiday had its genesis during a racquetball game between John Baur and
Mark Summers, two friends in Albany, Oregon. It was a private joke that
went around the world. The rest is, if not history, at least a good story,
which you can read at their Web site http://www.talklikeapirate.com .
To help you celebrate the day this year, we offer a sampling of words based
on pirate lingo.

A note -- I've often heard people talk about pirates' "cockney accents."
Wrong! The stereotypical pirate has a Cornish accent, based on the
performance of Long John Silver by actor Robert Newton in the 1950 Disney
version of "Treasure Island". He was from Cornwall, and his over-the-top
performance and native accent are the reason people think that's what a
pirate sounded like. Of course, pirates came from all nationalities. But
the pop culture image is firmly embedded, and Robert Newton is the reason
why.

(John Baur worked 23 years in the newspaper business and two years as a
university science writer before casting his lot as a pirate author and
performer. He and Summers are co-authors of the book "Pirattitude!")


buccaneer (buk-uh-NEER) noun

   1. An unscrupulous adventurer in politics, business, etc.

   2. A pirate.

[From French boucanier (buccaneer, barbecuer, hunter of wild ox),
from boucan (a frame for smoking meat), from Tupi mukem.]

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

Buccaneer comes from a French adaptation of a Carib Indian word bukan, a
way of slow-cooking meat over a low fire on a grill. The first bouncaniers
were interlopers in "Spain's" Caribbean, and the Spaniards tried to drive
them out. It was only too easy for England to recruit the buccaneers into
attacking Spanish interests. So modern day barbecuers, with their Webber
gas grills and comical aprons, are actually descendants of the classic
Caribbean pirates.

  "[Greg] Palast's book is packed with groundbreaking new information about 
   the corruption of empire, the lies of our leaders and the raiding of the 
   treasury by crony capitalists and corporate buccaneers."
   John Nichols; Giving 'em Hell - And the Truth; The Capital Times 
   (Madison, Wisconsin); Sep 7, 2006.

Sponsored by:

Ever wonder why we don't just talk, we chew the fat? Derivation, a hilarious
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Monthly French, German, Italian and Spanish cultural audio magazines for
intermediate-to-advanced learners. http://web.champs-elysees.com/wsmith1

............................................................................
Very few established institutions, governments and constitutions ... are
ever destroyed by their enemies until they have been corrupted and weakened
by their friends. -Walter Lippman, journalist (1889-1974)

Discuss this week's words on our bulletin board: http://wordsmith.org/board

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

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

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