T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
564.1 | whimpering whimporwill | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, 293-5358, VAX Architecture | Fri Sep 23 1988 05:23 | 1 |
| One who whimpers?
|
564.2 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | That was Zen; this is Dao | Fri Sep 23 1988 08:55 | 8 |
| Though the word is spelled "wimp" (at least, everywhere I've
come across it in print), I agree that it -- and its adjectival
form "wimpy" -- is likely derived from "whimper".
I couldn't find it in my AHD, which dates from 1979. Come to
think of it, I'm not sure when "wimp" came into common parlance.
--- jerry
|
564.3 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Sep 23 1988 15:38 | 10 |
|
Wimp could have some roots in Popeye cartoons. Wimpy was the guy who
was always trying to cadge a meal ("I will gladly pay you Tuesday for
a hamburger today").
Or we could just go ahead and apply an ex post facto acronymal meaning.
Well-Intentioned Mediocre Person?
JP
|
564.4 | | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Fri Sep 23 1988 22:00 | 8 |
| I agree with the suggestion of John in .3. Wasn't the full name
"J. Wellington Wimpy"? The cartoon character was a someone who
had a outward appearance of class and dignity but was a zero
underneath.
There seems to have been a touch of social comment in the strip.
While Popeye was the working-class doer, Wimpy wouldn't deign
to do anything and lived on hand-outs.
|
564.5 | Strong to the finich | VAXUUM::T_PARMENTER | Tongue in cheek, fist in air! | Fri Sep 23 1988 22:26 | 6 |
| Segar, the Popeye artist and author, was quite the verbalist. He
also invented/popularized the word "jeep". (I know that GP is short
for General Purpose, but the jeeps in the strip were handy little
creatures whom everybody liked.)
Quite the verbalist: He also invented Popeye's language.
|
564.6 | Popeye, et al. trivia | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Fri Sep 23 1988 23:03 | 26 |
| Re .last_couple:
On J. Wellington Wimpy. He was at least as memorible as the spinach-
eating sailor after whom the strip was eventually named (it was
originally _Thimble Theater_, and Popeye wasn't in the opening
episodes). Wimpy was a devious sorty. Besides his "Would you give
me a hamburger today for which I will pay you Tuesday?" line, there
were a couple of other quotes worth recording. "Why don't you come
over to my house for a duck dinner? You bring the ducks." Or,
when threatened, "Let's you and him fight." If Popeye gained some
strength from spinach, Wimpy was so identified with hamburgers that
I saw a restaurant in London called "Wimpy's," with a picture of
the fat fellow on it. For all I know, it might have been part of
a chain (and I use "restaurant" to include fast food).
As far as jeeps were concerned, I only recall Eugene, but jeeps
had the power both to prognosticate and to depower witches like
the Sea Hag.
On Popeye, his most famous expression was, "I yam what I yam, and
that's all I yam." When Olive Oyl once brought him a discionary
and showed him that the definition for "yam" was "sweet potato,"
he sauid, "Well, blow me down! I must be the firsk person to find
a mistake in the dictionary."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
564.7 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, 293-5358, VAX Architecture | Sat Sep 24 1988 01:45 | 2 |
| Wimpy's *is* a chain of fast-food restaurants specializing
in hamburgers.
|
564.8 | on yams and their derivation.. | WMOIS::B_REINKE | As true as water, as true as light | Sat Sep 24 1988 04:41 | 4 |
| wasn't Popeye's little boy called Sweet Pea and he called
either him or Olive his Sweet Patooie?
Bonnie
|
564.9 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | That was Zen; this is Dao | Sat Sep 24 1988 10:11 | 12 |
| All this discussion of Wimpy is all well and good, but I
don't really think that the term "wimp" was derived from the
character. For one, I don't really think that Wimpy had the
characteristics that one associates with wimps. It would
also seem to me that there's too much elapsed time between
the introduction of Wimpy and the coinage of "wimp"
Regarding the Wimpy's hamburger chain, I am given to understand
that in fact, "wimpy" is a colloquial term for hamburger in
Britain. Is this true?
--- jerry
|
564.10 | re .-1 | MARVIN::KNOWLES | the teddy-bears have their nit-pick | Mon Sep 26 1988 15:14 | 31 |
| � Regarding the Wimpy's hamburger chain, I am given to understand
� that in fact, "wimpy" is a colloquial term for hamburger in
� Britain. Is this true?
Not exactly. Like Hoover, Xerox, Linoleum etc. the Wimpy chain
strenuously oppose the growth of this colloquialism, and with some
success. A parent asking a child what he wants to eat would say `Would
you like a beefburger?' `Beefburger' itself started life as a trade
mark (belonging to Bird's Eye?) I think, or perhaps it was only what is
legally defined as a `special name' (not that I know what the
definition is) but `beefburger' is much more widely used now than
`wimpy'.
The institution, tho', or the `meals' purveyed, are often more loosely
referred to as `wimpys'. People might agree to have `a wimpy' on the
way home after a film, say, regardless of the name over the shop. Or
when a shop changes its name/function/d�cor people might say `It's
being re-opened as a wimpy', even if it belongs to some other chain.
I think .-1 must be right about the lapse of time being too great
between the Popeye character and the coinage of `wimp'. It seems
to me that the `Wimpy' chain may have got their name from that
character; but that would have made the step to `wimp' even greater.
My guess is that `wimp' is just a conflation of words like `weak'
and `pimply' [`therefore' adolescent/immature/brash/tasteless etc.].
Incidentally, I heard - about a year ago - a verb derived from the
noun: `to wimp out', meaning roughly the same as `to bottle out' (which
itself would take some explaining - any offers? )
b
|
564.11 | "Patootie"="potato": "patooie"= expectoratory sound | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Mon Sep 26 1988 17:14 | 8 |
| Re .8 (Bonnie):
Olive Oyl was/is Popeye's "Sweet Patootie." (Well, if Popeye can
say "I yam what I yam ....") ^
Sweet Pea was called "an infank" by Popeye.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
564.12 | | PSTJTT::TABER | Answer hazy -- ask again later | Mon Sep 26 1988 17:34 | 8 |
| In the late 50's through early 60's in the Boston area, we used to taunt
other kids by calling them "whimperers" which gradually became "whimp."
I don't know if the same was occuring all around the globe, but I've
always assumed "wimp" derived from "whimper" somehow. Because of this
early history, to this day, I spell it "whimp" which has caused some
lively debate with folks who spell it "wimp."
>>>==>PStJTT
|
564.13 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | That was Zen; this is Dao | Tue Sep 27 1988 11:27 | 14 |
| re:.10
"To wimp out" has been around over here for a while. The idea
being that backing out of something is somehow craven -- a
characteristic of wimps.
There's been a number of similiar verbs. The one that most
quickly leaps to mind is "to veg [soft "g"] out", which as far
as I can determine, derived from the noun "veg", which was
coined by John Belushi in a SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE skit as being
someone who's become a "human vegetable". A television addict,
for instance, "vegges out" when he gets in front of a tv screen.
--- jerry
|
564.14 | | ERIS::CALLAS | I saw Elvis kissing Santa Claus | Tue Sep 27 1988 23:06 | 6 |
| There's a rule of thumb that a word exists for twenty to fifty years
before it first appears in an etymological reference. These days,
twenty might even be on the high side. But new words are often common
in spoken language before they ever appear in print.
Jon
|
564.15 | | UBOHUB::SWANN | Mike Swann | Thu Sep 29 1988 15:22 | 7 |
| re .10
There is a discussion in TRUCKS::GREAT_BRITAIN on some slang terms
and their derivation.
Mike
|
564.16 | FWIW | UNTADI::ODIJP | Come up an' be me sometime ! | Fri Sep 30 1988 17:59 | 13 |
|
Re .9
> Regarding the Wimpy's hamburger chain, I am given to understand
> that in fact, "wimpy" is a colloquial term for hamburger in
> Britain. Is this true?
No . It's just another chain .
We just call them 'burgers' .
John J
|
564.17 | To vege, or vege out | LEDS::BATES | | Sat Oct 01 1988 05:37 | 14 |
|
re:.13
To vege out derives from the verb vegetate, to grow as plants do,
to live an uneventful or monotonous life.
Long before John Belushi showed up, we were using the verb "to vege"
outside the hallowed halls of Harvard University. When I returned
in 1971, I noticed that "to vege" had become "to vege out", as the
mid-Sixties verb "to freak" (to behave in a bizarre or out-of-control
fashion, usually under the influence of drugs) had morphosed into
"to freak out".
Gloria
|
564.18 | To pig, or pig out | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom,293-5358,VAX&MIPS Architecture | Sat Oct 01 1988 17:22 | 5 |
| To "pig out" derives from the verb pig, to grow as pigs do, to live a
dirty and short life.
It came into the lexicon during the late '60s as derogatory references
to the police as pigs.
|
564.19 | Round here pigging out don't mean nuthin bout cops | SSGBPM::KENAH | Overlapping chapters | Mon Oct 03 1988 21:52 | 4 |
| To pig out means to eat like a pig; that is, to eat massive amounts
of food. It has no connection with the police.
andrew
|
564.20 | when was "pig" a verb, anyway? | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Mon Oct 03 1988 22:41 | 5 |
| Re .19 (Andrew):
Ever visit a Dunkin' Donuts? :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
564.21 | as the note takes yet another left turn... | SSGBPM::KENAH | Overlapping chapters | Thu Oct 06 1988 19:57 | 21 |
| �Re .19 (Andrew):
�
�Ever visit a Dunkin' Donuts? :-)
�
�Steve Kallis, Jr.
Good point!
Digression: When Robocop was in its theater release, there was
a weekly ad that ran in the Sunday New York Times. Usually it was
a full page ad. They used the promo drawing with the following
copy:
"Seventeen weeks and he still hasn't stopped for donuts."
Each week they increased the number by one...
Neat ad -- I liked it.
andrew
|
564.22 | "son of Wimp" | WARDER::SACKFIELD | keep on trucking .... | Tue Dec 20 1988 11:37 | 8 |
| My husband (Phil) calls his 6ft 3in extremly macho friend (Alyn)
"WIMP" and his 5 year old son "Son of Wimp" and occasionally "Wimplet".
It's got a standing joke in their local that Phil now orders a pint
a gripe water for Alyn!!
Janice Sackfield
Warrington UK
|