T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
403.2 | Very rough translation | COMICS::KEY | Calling International Rescue... | Wed Aug 26 1987 08:20 | 7 |
| It's something like "Woe to he who evil thinks of it". What "it"
is, I'm not sure. Possibly the royal coat of arms. Reminds me of
my old school motto "Gardez Bien" (French rather than Latin - it
was only a comprehensive school!). That meant "Keep well", but we
never found out what we were supposed to be keeping...
Andy
|
403.3 | | COMICS::KEY | Calling International Rescue... | Wed Aug 26 1987 08:41 | 5 |
| Moreover:
I *think* that it's actually medieval French in origin, and that it's
the motto of the Royal House of Windsor. The Windsors, of course,
began with - erm - ah - you know, whatsisname the thingummyth...
|
403.4 | Order of the Garter | IOSG::DUTT | Nigel Dutt | Wed Aug 26 1987 09:13 | 9 |
| My memory's a bit hazy, but....
This is tied up with the "Order of the Garter". The garter fell
from a lady at the court of King ???. He gallantly picked it up saying
"Honi soit......". Subsequently, the Order of the Garter was
established as one of the highest honours in the land, and is still
awarded to this day. There's only a few of them and they tend to
include retired Prime Ministers and the like - and of course they
all wear a garter as part of their regalia.
|
403.5 | | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Wed Aug 26 1987 09:49 | 9 |
| First, forgive .1 - the network dropped while I was trying to reply.
I don't know when the motto appeared on the coat of arms.
It translates as "Evil to him who thinks evil." From "Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight". Middle English, circa 1370, although the quote is in a French
(not Middle English) dialect.
Larry
|
403.6 | What a shame | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corpore sano | Wed Aug 26 1987 10:02 | 42 |
| "Honi soit qui mal y pense" is the motto of the Knights of the Garter.
I think the Order of the Garter is always conferred in a ceremony
at Windsor, or that the Knights (a limited number, something like
26) are based (in some way) at Windsor - which would account for
the Windsor association (.3).
The motto isn't (and I don't think it's ever been) on a monarch's
coat of arms. To recap: it's all based on an event involving a
garter that slipped down from its proper place during a royal
occasion. Everyone was aghast (this was in the days before Janet
Reger), except one person (the monarch, I think) who bent down and
returned the garter to its owner, saying 'The only shame involved
should be the shame on those who think this is shameful' (or words
to that effect). As the court language was French, his actual words
were 'Honi soit qui mal y pense'. Maybe the King in question was
pretty erudite, translating a quotation from Sir Gawain at the same
time as de-fusing a potentially embarassing siuation.
The motto on the monarch's coat of arms is 'Dieu et mon droit' -
usually translated (unhelpfully) as 'God and my right'. I
have an idea - unproven, because the British Library wouldn't
let me look at the earliest available French translation of
the Bible while I was researching something else - based on
two facts:
Modern French Bibles have the phrase 'Dieu est ma justice'
(or some such word) somewhere in the Old Testament
Old French manuscripts - before the Acad�mie fixed the spelling -
used to alternate fairly erratically between 'et' and 'est'
when transcribing the French word derived from Latin 'est'
The idea: 'Dieu e[s]t mon droit' was a statement of the Divine Right of
Kings, borrowed as a quote from the only available Bible in the
language of the English court when an English monarch first adopted
that principle.
That's my story, and I'm sticking to it.
Bob ('Hair-brained scheme') Knowles
|
403.7 | black magic connotations | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Fri Oct 16 1987 11:41 | 6 |
| Re .4, .6: I cannot recall the name of the lady in question, nor
the name of the king. However, I have come across anumber of references
to the incident: it was believed that the garter was worn by members
of the two royal covens (each numbering 13 of course) and that the
king was the master of one of them. Hence everybody being aghast,
but the king played it off well.
|
403.8 | go to it, JoyofLexers! | TERZA::ZANE | unique to one, common to all | Fri Jan 22 1988 20:55 | 20 |
|
From: PLATA::EDWARDS "Only 15 Billion years later 22-Jan-1988 1231" 22-JAN-1988 12:31
To: @SOCIAL,EDWARDS
Subj:
Anybody who knows:
Doesn anybody out there in @social land know what the phrase
DUIT ON MON DEI
means? Is it French? Has anyone seen it before and where?
Thanks for any assistance.
John
|
403.9 | Do it on Monday? | QUOKKA::SNYDER | Wherever you go, there you are | Fri Jan 22 1988 21:46 | 0 |
403.10 | "Dieu et mon droit? | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Mon Jan 25 1988 17:03 | 4 |
| re .8: it looks like a badly scrambled version of "Dieu [aarrgh
- I'm sure that spelling is wrong?!] et mon droit", which means
"God and my right". If I recall it used to appear on British coinage
and was some sort of a royal motto.
|
403.11 | a hoax ? | YIPPEE::LIRON | | Mon Jan 25 1988 19:14 | 18 |
| re "DUIT ON MON DEI"
Means nothing at all in French.
In Latin, 'dei' is the genitive form of 'deus' (god). 'Duit' could
be present or perfect form of a verb; alas, there's no such verb,
[except an archaic form of optative subjonctive for 'do' (to give),
but that's really rare and far-fetched]. 'On' & 'Mon' means nothing
per se, and are not amongst the usual abbreviations. So I doubt
very much that the sentence could be Latin.
'Duit' could be Dutch, but I'm not sure.
I wouldn't be surprised if it was just an other spelling for
"Do it on Monday", as suggested in .-2.
roger
|
403.12 | It'll be done when I get a ... | CHIC::BELL | David Bell, Service Technology @VBO | Wed Jan 27 1988 10:01 | 1 |
| Rather like being issued with "Round Tuits" to get your job done.
|
403.14 | | SPUD::SCHARMANN | Computer Freek - Beware | Mon Mar 21 1988 20:11 | 15 |
|
RE.12
Believe it or not there is a company in the U.S.A. that manufactures
round tuits. they are things you put under hot pots when you place
them on the table, normally called truits.
So....now, for the person who always says I'll do it when I get
around to it (round tuit) has no more excuses if someone were to
get this person one for a gift
Chuck
|
403.15 | nit | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Mar 21 1988 20:49 | 3 |
| in re .14 "normally called truits"
it is "trivets" :-) :-)
|
403.16 | I've heard that word before ... | ZFC::DERAMO | Think of it as evolution in action. | Mon Mar 21 1988 23:54 | 1 |
| I thought "truit" was what the pitcher did to a baseball.
|
403.17 | according to webster... | VENICE::SKELLY | | Tue Mar 22 1988 07:43 | 2 |
| No, it's what happens to your neighbor's window. The baseball goes
"truit".
|
403.18 | | SPUD::SCHARMANN | Computer Freek - Beware | Tue Mar 22 1988 14:36 | 10 |
|
RE: .14
Yes your right!!! They are called trivets
My mistake
Chuck
|
403.19 | | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Tue Mar 22 1988 18:17 | 1 |
| When I grew up, a truit was someone who played hookey, not baseball.
|
403.20 | silly me | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Tue Mar 22 1988 20:00 | 3 |
| I thought a truit was a kind of fish.
--bonnie
|
403.21 | While we're at it | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Tue Mar 22 1988 20:10 | 8 |
| Re: .18
> Yes your right
It should be 'you're right,' unless, of course, you refer to his
moral right to correct you.
Bernie
|
403.22 | a coupla more nits | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Mar 23 1988 02:34 | 9 |
| in re .21 Bernie....um another nit...refering to 'his moral right
to correct' I am a her....:-)
and also Bonnie...well if you don't know the difference between
a truit and a trout...would you and Neal and the kids like to
come to our place for a fish dinner :-)
Bonnie Jeanne
|
403.23 | Really, folks, it's like this ... | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Wed Mar 23 1988 17:34 | 4 |
| Actually, a "truit" is an ancient Celtic priest with problems in
articulation.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
403.24 | | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Wed Mar 23 1988 18:20 | 8 |
| I know this is I digression, but I couldn't resist.
< [...] MARKER::KALLIS "Why is everyone getting uptight?" >
Because they went to bed that way.
Jon
|
403.25 | whatta party! | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Wed Mar 23 1988 19:46 | 10 |
| Re .24 (Jon):
>Because they went to bed that way.
Beyond sleeping it off, eh?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
Yes, iot's a digression, but it deserveed a reply
|
403.26 | Hirsute, indeed! | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading UK | Wed Mar 23 1988 21:23 | 5 |
| > Yes, iot's a digression
No it's not, it's a trap on a PDP-11.
Jeff :-)
|
403.27 | A further digression. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Wed Mar 23 1988 21:50 | 14 |
| re. .23:
> Actually, a "truit" is an ancient Celtic priest with problems in
> articulation.
Sort of like the old chestnut:
Q. What goes "Marf!, Marf!"
A. A dog with a hairlip.
Larry
|
403.28 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Mar 24 1988 01:28 | 7 |
| Re: .22
A thousand pardons (well, perhaps a hundred will do). You didn't
sign .15 so I had to guess. I was too lazy too write "his or her;"
had too much self-respect to write "his/her."
Bernie
|
403.29 | understood | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Mar 24 1988 04:15 | 4 |
| in re .28 I shall try to be more careful about signing each note
I write...but I refuse to sign notes in word-assoc-football.
Bonnie
|