T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
328.1 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Split Decision | Tue Dec 06 1988 17:36 | 8 |
| Flonks: little, unidentifiable, inorganic pieces of stuff that
cling to clothes
Grindels: little, unidentifiable, organic pieces of stuff that
cling to clothes
Steve
|
328.2 | And nice-feeling stuff is "snitchy" | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Dec 06 1988 17:49 | 16 |
| No wonder you get stared at, Bonnie! There is no "e" in "mung".
("Mung" has the definition: mung - Mung Until No Good. Which
means it is an infinitely recursive definition. Which in itself
is a good phrase to trip off your tongue.)
With digital clocks overtaking analog clocks (metaphorically
speaking, that is, since they all run equally fast), I have gone
to using "deasil" and "widdershins" for clockwise and counterclockwise.
"Cruft" is anything that is cluttering a particular space up; it
can be stuff which is good, and useful, just let it do that *somewhere
else*.
"Clib" is the gooey stuff in the bottom of refrigerators.
Ann B.
|
328.3 | that explains it | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Tue Dec 06 1988 19:29 | 5 |
| Ann,
Well I pronounce it mun -ge which is probably why :-)
Bonnie
|
328.4 | Here's mine | MEMV03::CROCITTO | It's Jane Bullock Crocitto now | Tue Dec 06 1988 19:54 | 26 |
| Glad I'm not the only one who invents words..
When you FLOPAKIZE something, you do with it whatever it needs to
have done to it; as in (passing someone an open jar and its
lid) "Here--go flopakize this."
EGGY-DEL-FUEGOS (pronounced like 'eggy-del-f'way-goes') are any
egg dish you put together that doesn't follow a particular recipe.
FLAPDOODLE--an epithet used when you drop food, especially a piece
of buttered bread that lands, you guessed; butter-side down.
FANTODS--This is a nervous condition that always comes in multiples,
i.e., "I really had the fantods last night!"
SQUIDGEROLE--This is an endearment to a slightly pudgy husband or
cat (or both, see SQUIDGEROLES.).
GLUNG--This is the stuff you're always bringing up from the back
of your throat when you have a cold.
CHEEZOID--Describes a geeky sort of person (this one's not my own!).
Keep these coming!
Jane
|
328.5 | A whole book of 'em! | QUARK::LIONEL | One Voice | Tue Dec 06 1988 20:54 | 14 |
| Paul Dickson has just released a book of such words that he collected
from people all over the country. Richard Lederer, a syndicated
columnist who appears in the Nashua Telegraph, has written several
columns on them and forwarded those supplied by his readers to
Dickson.
However, these "family words" aren't really the sort that Bonnie
mentions in .0, which are rather widely known and used.
If you have amusing words that have been in your family for a while,
send them to Lederer, care of the Telegraph, including as much as
you can about the word's meaning and origin.
Steve
|
328.6 | There's a thesis in here somewhere. . . | HANDY::MALLETT | Split Decision | Wed Dec 07 1988 00:49 | 10 |
| re: .4 "Flapdoodle"
Around our zoo, a "flapdoodle" was a big commotion, with an
implication that said goings on were, at best, entirely unwarranted.
F'rinstance, I bet Ma would've said something like "Some of what
I've seen in those NOTES conferences you have. . .well, I've never
seen such a flapdoodle!"
Steve
|
328.7 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | UI:Where the rubber meets the road | Wed Dec 07 1988 08:21 | 3 |
| Nugatory is a fav in our group. It means useless. We use it to mean a technical
issue that doesn't really matter [anymore].
Mez
|
328.8 | SHEWE | AIMHI::LESTER | CLAIRE BOLAND | Wed Dec 07 1988 09:25 | 4 |
|
When ever I make a decision for my husband and I with out
talking it over first he refers to it as a SHEWE.
|
328.9 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | recursive finger-pointing ensued | Wed Dec 07 1988 09:31 | 28 |
| real words include:
omphaloskepsis - the act of contemplating one's navel. Computers
that have "gone south" are probably doing this in an electronic
sort of way.
defenestrate - to throw something or someone out of a window
(particularly from the highest floor of a building, from the french
for window, "fene(s?)tre")
unreal words include
Floydian - like freudian, only much, much weirder
frob - a thing.
tweak - a little change that makes something work.
twiddle - fiddling with something on a larger scale to make it work.
TBD - one of my favorites words. Appears so often in my documents
that it has its only place in my personal DECspell dictionary.
kludge - (clooj) - (has someone mentioned this?) - to jury-rig
something so that it works, usually in an extremely cheesy and
half-baked way.
|
328.11 | | AKOV12::MILLIOS | See CXCAD::PHYSCHALLENGED, Note 40 | Wed Dec 07 1988 11:48 | 31 |
| One that I came across a while back, and liked, and now use
occasionally when the situation merits (with the appropriate odd
looks that Bonnie has mentioned :^) is:
administrivia - administrative trivia.
My family has a habit of passing on "conversational gems" - they
progress from father to son, and are used as needed;
blatherskite - a person who talks too much (real word!)
Some are rather obscene, yet descriptive, phrases:
"A monkey f**king a football" : a phrase used to describe an incredibly
clumsy person trying to do a simple thing...
Dad was rather descriptive in his judgements toward me when I was
growing up, as you can see... :^)
BTW, did you know that "mung(e)" and "kludge" were originally invented
by the hackers at MIT, back in the early days of computing? The
Model Railroad Club at MIT, which later evolved into the hackers,
invented these words to describe what they were doing or what was
happening under the ever-more intricate railroad models that they
were building.
These, and other words/phrases, are described in the book "Hackers",
author forgotten... Excellent read, for any computer-oriented person.
Bill
|
328.12 | Pre-historic "mung" | SALEM::JWILSON | Just A Natural Man | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:10 | 32 |
| Back in Connecticut in the late 50's (No, I'm not REALLY that old
- I heard it from a friend. Yeah, That's the ticket!) Mung had
a very specific meaning:
[For the stout of heart Only!]
Mung: The vaginal discharge resulting from beating a pregnant gorilla
about the stomach x-number of times.
If we were "ranking" someone, we might say "Yer mother eats mung!"
or some similar witicism.
This was not the EXACT definition. Did anyone else use it in that
context? Please mention where/when.
Jack
|
328.13 | A family word | VINO::EVANS | The Few. The Proud. The Fourteens. | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:12 | 16 |
|
From me sainted mither:
"Ostepevious" (how do you spell a word that doesn't exist??)
(Aw-stah-pee'-vee-us)
The situation that happens when the mystery story is coming to
a climax. (You can tell this in the movies by the music)
The "s/hero" is walking through the darkened house, as the no-good-nik
waits behind a door to clobber her. Or JAWS is following the boat.
The situation is then said to be ostepevious.
--DE
|
328.14 | A game and a book of weird words | WEA::PURMAL | I don't want the world, just your half | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:17 | 19 |
| For those of you who like playing games and weird words try
Balderdash. It's a game that has a whole bunch of real unusual
words and their definitions.
One player selects a word for the other players to create a
definition for the word after the player spells and pronounces it.
Each of the other players composes a definition and returns it to
the player who read the word. The reader then reads out all of
the definitions including the correct one and the other players
try to guess the correct definition. Players score points whenever
someone (including themself) chooses their definition, or if they
select the proper definition. The reader scores points if no one
chooses the correct definition.
An excellent reference for strange words is "Mrs Byrnes Dictionary
of Unusual, Unique and Obscure Words". I remember posting the
publisher in the BOOKS conference quite a while ago.
ASP
|
328.15 | | WOODRO::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:54 | 13 |
| Granted, some of these aren't original:
FELGERCARB - crap (from Cattlecar..oops Battlestar Galactica)
MACGUYVERISM - making something out of scraps and have them work
(also known as Mickey Mousing) (guess where from)
KIDLET, YOUNGLING - child
Another weird word source (and I'm surprised that no one brought
it up) are the Sniglet books by Rich Hall.
K.C.
|
328.16 | more on mung | LEZAH::BOBBITT | recursive finger-pointing ensued | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:56 | 10 |
| I heard something similar of mung
formfeed for the timid of heart follows:
Mung was said to be the primary constituent in our campus food.
It was what dribbled out of the nose and mouth of an albino gorilla
when hung upside down and beaten around the head and shoulders with
a broad stick.
|
328.17 | can get very entertaining with the right words... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | recursive finger-pointing ensued | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:00 | 13 |
| Another form of Balderdash requires no game materials other than
a decent dictionary and paper and pencils. One person picks an
obscure word from the dictionary, and tells people what the word
is, and how it is spelled. They each make up a definition, and
write it down on their paper, while the word-picker writes down
the true one. The word-picker mixes the responses and reads them
aloud. Everyone votes on the one they think is right, and the one
who gets it right is the word-picker next time.
It was called "fictionary".
-Jody
|
328.18 | EMAD | FDCV03::ROSS | | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:15 | 13 |
| Re: .12
Jack, back in the early 50's (I'm told :-) ), there was a similar
definition of "mung" that circulated in the primarily-Jewish section
of Dorchester, MA.
To say to one's friend that "you eat mung" was the zenith of insults.
Kinda strange to think that saying "you eat shit" was mild, in
comparison. (No, no gentle readers: the phrase was considered
mild; shit, per se, wasn't.) :-)
Alan
|
328.19 | Poozle | CLT::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:29 | 9 |
|
RE: .16
An acquaintance of mine from Connecticut by way of Ohio called
this substance "poozle." The only difference was that he didn't
specify that the gorilla be albino. I suspect he picked up the
word in the Navy, given what he thought of the food...
Ron
|
328.20 | about three feet, if I 'member correctly | GADOL::LANGFELDT | Life ought to be amusing | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:44 | 10 |
|
pudies (poodies): My neice's word for, ummm, passing gas.
Usually followed by volumes of giggles.
Bar-zoom : The term for how high Barbie dolls bounce
off of those mini-tramps used for jogging.
(I knew there was some use for a Barbie doll!)
Sharon
|
328.21 | a useful unit for sarcastic people | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Wed Dec 07 1988 14:21 | 7 |
| "Bogon", a new unit coined to measure degrees of bogosity or
just how 'bogus' something really is. This came across
the usenet TCP-IP mailing list a month ago or so.
"That was a 20-bogon description, let me straigthen you out".
DougO
|
328.23 | Nuke the pusser | TOLKIN::KIRK | Matt Kirk | Wed Dec 07 1988 17:16 | 3 |
| Pusser - a cat
Nuke - to microwave
|
328.24 | | AKOV12::MILLIOS | See CXCAD::PHYSCHALLENGED, Note 40 | Thu Dec 08 1988 10:47 | 7 |
| RE: Fictionary
My mother's version is the same as Jody's except that the dictionary
passes around the circle; this allows everybody to get a chance
as "reader", since "readers" often get the most points per round.
Bill
|
328.25 | scoring in fictionary | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Dec 08 1988 10:55 | 17 |
| re "fictionary":
The way we scored it in college was a bit different. The "reader"
could not score at all. Everyone who guessed the correct definition
got one point. You also got a point for every person who guessed
your definition as the correct one. Needless to say, the dictionary
rotated among the players.
/
( ___
) ///
/
P.S. You were also honor bound to declare if you already knew the
selected word.
|
328.26 | Notes from the... | NECVAX::VEILLEUX_L | | Fri Dec 09 1988 15:45 | 3 |
| Moronosphere: place where idiocy originates/resides
|
328.27 | ijit | TUNER::FLIS | Let's put this technology to work... | Fri Dec 09 1988 21:48 | 10 |
|
ijit - cross between an idiot and a jert
polaroid - cross between a polack and a hemeroid, and their both
a pain in the _ss (Hey, I'm a pole, so I guess it's ok
for me to pose a pole joke. No offense intended if any
taken.)
jim
|
328.28 | So, who's right? | ANKH::CRITZ | | Mon Dec 12 1988 09:14 | 5 |
| The _Nashua Telegraph_ had a bunch of these last week. I
was going to bring it in, but was too busy. Now, if it's
still there when I get home tonight, I'll bring it in.
Scott (They spelled _munge_ with an "e.")
|
328.29 | Passed on from generation to generation | AWARD2::HARMON | | Mon Dec 12 1988 14:42 | 9 |
| My mother always said (and I find myself saying):
Potwallup: Putter around the house and accomplish lots of little
stuff
Calooping: Going out with friends to have fun and do silly things
P.
|
328.30 | Don't ask me what made me think of this one | WEA::PURMAL | I don't want the world, just your half | Mon Dec 12 1988 16:11 | 3 |
| Subdude - a surfer who's fallen off his board and hasn't surfaced.
ASP
|
328.33 | Re .32 Mine, too! K.C. | WILKIE::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Tue Dec 13 1988 08:29 | 1 |
|
|
328.34 | more dubious words | USAT02::CARLSON | sail on the steel breeze... | Wed Dec 14 1988 08:14 | 11 |
|
- budua, (pronounced bud-dwa) another term for "buddy"
- punkaloid, slang, for punker
- Bufordites, people who live in Buford
- Gumer, (pronounced goomer) same thing as a goon, or a goober
t.
|
328.35 | One of my own... | MAMIE::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Wed Dec 14 1988 09:00 | 5 |
| Grandsiblings, grandsibs - singular term for nieces and nephews.
(ie. Yesterday I had my 10th grandsib, a niece, Monica Danielle
Davenport.)
K.C.
|
328.36 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Dec 14 1988 09:27 | 3 |
| > Bufordites, people who live in Buford
Stoics -- people who live in Stow
|
328.38 | A little off the path, but... | WILKIE::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Wed Dec 14 1988 10:00 | 11 |
| Mainiacs - people from Maine
(Middlesex - not male nor female?)
Toyota - stuffed characature from "The Empire Strikes Back"
Relevant - large land mammal with big ears and a long trunk.
(I'm sorry; 'tis the season to be foppy!)
K.C.
|
328.39 | | SEDJAR::THIBAULT | It doesn't make sense. Isn't it | Wed Dec 14 1988 11:55 | 6 |
|
bartroid - bartender
waitroid - waiter/waitress
Jenna
|
328.40 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Dec 14 1988 13:25 | 4 |
| Re: .39
One place I've been calls them "waitrons." (Maybe it's meant to
sychronize with patrons, but I keep thinking of that Disney movie.)
|
328.41 | royalty | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Dec 14 1988 18:50 | 5 |
|
The Grand Poo-Bah - my mother's name for anyone/animal that seems
to be getting above themselves ie. When my cat sits on Mom's new
chair - "who does he think he is, the The Grand Poo-Bah?" and she
chases him away. liesl
|
328.42 | | MILVAX::BOYAJIAN | Millrat in training | Thu Dec 15 1988 01:29 | 5 |
| Let's see... my supervisor is my boss. That means that his boss
(supervisor) is my grandboss, and *her* boss is my great-grandboss,
and...
--- jerry
|
328.43 | Here is is | MUMMY::CRITZ | | Thu Dec 15 1988 12:47 | 72 |
|
Here are the words I promised from the Richard Ledered and the Nashua
Telegraph [Tuesday, December 6, 1988]:
o Glippy - Almost, but not quite, nauseous.
o Gookimo - Short for "Look, the baby is doing something cute.
Don't do anything to distract him/her."
o Gription - Child's blend of "grip" and "traction." (I used to work
will a fella who always used this word. We installed appliances
together, and would often find that we didn't have enought
gription to hold on to a specific appliance.
o Hoddibitchew - That which is left in the tub after you've bathed
and drained the tub.
o Holy ol' Red Rattlin' - One of many ersatz swearwords and
expressions reported.
o Hoybee - The swirled pattern of hair that can be seen on the head
of a short-haired boy.
o Hozey - A dibs word, as in "I hozey the wayback"
o Munge and Farlevooge - These two words are the direct result of
adding a baby (with a soft head) to a family with a delighted
older brother and sister. The first word means to run something
(baby's head) affectionately, but vigorously. The second word
describes the act of walking around a seated baby in a circle with
one's hand on the baby's head.
o Make-tend - A delightful blend of "make-believe" and "pretend."
o Murgatroid - A proper name (at last) for those shiny garden sphere
that sit on pedestals in gardens.
o Nancy - (adj.) Horribly perfect and goody-goody; usually applied
to people inspired by Nancy Drew.
o Nerbils - Pieces of junk that accumulate in the sheets at the
bottom of the bed.
o Noonie - Naked state that occurs when kids take off their clothes
to put on PJs.
o Odoralls - Toddler's overall, for obvious reasons.
o The Part - A foreign body in one's drink.
o Underfootage - Standard condition prevailing when cats are in the
kitchen.
o Scubble - Any large piece of equipment that is used to build
roads.
Page 2
o Teetulinear - (1) Very small (used mostly for inanimate objects);
(2) In a frenzy.
o Thwathy - Describes the taste and feel of a piece of fruit that is
supposed to be juicy but turns out to be flannel-like.
Remember, folks, you heard/read it here first.
Scott
|
328.44 | "What's a `volunteer'?" | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Dec 15 1988 13:21 | 8 |
| Well, Richard (and Scott), the *real* name for a Murgatroid
is a "gazing ball". I got that out of a juvenile by Jane Langton.
One I just remembered:
"slurker" - someone who has been lazy and not come forward to
volunteer to work.
Ann B.
|
328.45 | Roots | SLOVAX::HASLAM | Creativity Unlimited | Thu Dec 15 1988 15:23 | 7 |
| When my daughter brought home a "baby" plant from her parenting
class at school, I announced to the family that I was now a Grandplant
and "he" was my Plantson. "He" was the most peaceful "child" I've
ever seen, and I'd "plant sit" for "him" anytime. ("He" was a boy
by the draw of a slip of paper.)
:) Barb
|
328.46 | | SLSTRN::DONAHUE | | Thu Dec 15 1988 16:18 | 7 |
| Crestacion. The hard glob of toothpaste at the end of the pump.
Aimacion. When you use the other brand.
(Strange mood. Forgive me please.) 8^)
Susan
|
328.47 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Split Decision | Thu Dec 15 1988 17:07 | 25 |
| This one needs a bit of preface. I'm not sure it's "wierd" nor
am I a good person to try and judge what is/isn't wierd (too
close to the trees, and all that). Also, you have to have a
bit of a feeling for the source.
Our multi-key player's name is Carol and she's from the west
coast; to say the least she can do the valley-girl/valley-boy
schticks to perfection. Furthermore, we've long since established
a strong sense of equality and team-ness in the band, so phrases
we might not use "on the street" are o.k. in the studio. Finally,
anyone who spoke Carol (or Meg, our lead vocalist) would know, in
no uncertain terms, that they are *real* powerful people; a male
wanting to lay some MCP debris on them had best find a healthier
venue (lest he find himself wearing a couple of his primary sexual
characterstics as earrings. . .).
So, to make a short story long, despite the fact that "ette" usually
signifies the diminutive in language, it seemed perfectly "right"
when (to stop us from dithering around between tunes), Carol hollers
out, "Hey, like, let's go all you dudes and dudettes!"
Way cool!
Steve
|
328.48 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Millrat in training | Fri Dec 16 1988 10:40 | 7 |
| re:.47
The band The Fools introduced their song "Life Sucks, and Then You
Die" with the phrase, "Here's a country song for...all you hombres
and hombrettes..."
--- jerry
|
328.49 | That brought up memories | BOLT::MINOW | Repent! Godot is coming soon! Repent! | Fri Dec 16 1988 16:19 | 7 |
| re: .48
About 20 years ago, when translating a Swedish film, I invented the
phrase "hill-billy and hill-millie" -- the latter as a translation
for the Swedish word "Dalkulla" (gal from the province of Dalarna).
Martin.
|
328.50 | Rathole alert!! | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Millrat in training | Sat Dec 17 1988 02:33 | 6 |
| re:.49
Speaking of which, I've been meaning to ask you, was it "Yellow"
or "Blue" (or both) that you translated? I am curious. :-)
--- jerry
|
328.51 | | TULA::JBADER | Feliz Navidad | Sun Dec 18 1988 02:05 | 5 |
| Grunging: what we did at slumber parties as teens. Hair in BIG
rollers, baby doll nighties, 4 seasons full blast
and experimenting with makeup. It was commonly called
a Grunge night.
-sunny-
|
328.52 | Translation memories | BOLT::MINOW | Repent! Godot is coming soon! Repent! | Mon Dec 19 1988 09:53 | 24 |
| re: 50 (rathole)
Both books, and the subtitles for -Blue. The note, however, was referring
to another film, "They Call Us Mods" (I wanted to title it "Dirty Hippies")
that was a sort of real-world Alice's Restaurant. (In all cases, I worked
with Jenny Bowman, who is still translating films.)
They Call Us Mods (Swedish "Dom kallar oss Mods") cronicled the misadventures
of two late -sixties street people, wandering around Stockholm, smoking
dope, and making the bourgeous nervous about the purity of their daughters.
The lead roles were played by two real street people, and it was never clear
whether the film was real or fiction.
About ten years later, the director made a second film, "A Proper Life"
(Swedish "Ett Anst�ndigt Liv"), that continued the cronicle. One of the
hippies was just barely keeping his nose above the water, the other was still
shooting dope. One of the scenes showed him with an overdose, being
rushed to the emergency ward, then joking with the doctor the next day.
In reality, he died of an overdose during the shooting.
Both guys had kids, and the director plans a third film, possibly showing
the second generation.
Martin.
|
328.53 | hmmm | LEZAH::BOBBITT | so wired I could broadcast... | Mon Dec 19 1988 13:44 | 11 |
| new film
release date unknown
They Call Us Co-Mods
(sorry, it had to be said)
|
328.54 | they can be found everywhere | BALBOA::STARK | amanaplanacanalpanama | Wed Dec 21 1988 08:41 | 7 |
| farbeedoo; unwanted matter attached to another material, as in a
piece of lint on an article of clothing. or a piece of
lint stuck in the belly button or...
i can't recall the wierd words which apply to an auto with one
working headlight as oppossed to one, with both headlights operational.
but there are words for these.
|
328.55 | | NSSG::ALFORD | another fine mess.... | Wed Dec 21 1988 09:00 | 4 |
| re...-1
that's a 'popeye'---car with one headlite.
|
328.56 | at least in New Jersey it was | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Dec 21 1988 09:10 | 5 |
| in re .55 in re .54
NO, no, a car with one headlight is a 'pididdle'
Bonnie
|
328.57 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | Ariz(9) 76 -- Wash 59 | Wed Dec 21 1988 11:13 | 12 |
|
>> NO, no, a car with one headlight is a 'pididdle'
no, its "perdiddle"..oh, that's right, people out east don't
pronounce their "r"s so we could be saying the same thing!!!
8^)
many smiles!!
kath
|
328.58 | Definately "pididdle".... | CURIE::LICEA_KANE | | Wed Dec 21 1988 12:21 | 14 |
| No, it's conservation of Rs. There are only a finite supply of
them.
So, for every word like "perdiddle", there has to an equal number
of words like "pahk". For every "tobaccer" there's got to be
a "smokah".
Notice carefully! We don't drop our Rs because we want to. No.
We do it because we *have* to! People in the south and midwest
and west stole them from us.
(I don't even want to get into words like nucular.)
-mr. bill
|
328.59 | Everything's connected. | BOLT::MINOW | Repent! Godot is coming soon! Repent! | Wed Dec 21 1988 12:42 | 5 |
| Strange how an R looks like a bent paperclip.
Perhaps it's trying to tell us something.
Martin.
|
328.60 | clarification of the "rules" | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Wed Dec 21 1988 13:01 | 5 |
|
it's called a spedunckle if it's the rear light out! And it's
worth two kisses!
justme....jacqui
|
328.61 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Wed Dec 21 1988 13:37 | 9 |
| How about the word
Picky-ooney
It's a trait someone has when they can't help picking apart everything
all the time......
Anna
|
328.62 | boy-girl games | SKYLRK::OLSON | Construction Zone: Watch This Space! | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:13 | 8 |
| re spedunkle, pididdle; we always used them as an excuse to punch each
other on the arm.
> worth two kisses!
Sounds like your games are more fun.
DougO
|
328.63 | *Both* Lights Out - That's Another Story :-) | FDCV03::ROSS | | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:18 | 8 |
| Bonnie, here, in the Boston 'burbs, we also called one-headlight-out
(or on - I guess it depends upon one's perspective) a "padiddle".
You will kindly note the absence of any "r's" in that word. :-)
And, jacqui, you were definitely part of a generous crowd. All we
got for a padiddle was *one* kiss.
Alan
|
328.64 | Alan when did you need lights out??? | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:24 | 14 |
| Alan,
the word my friends used in New Jersey could have been spelled
padiddle, I don't think I ever saw it written down :-) ;-).
and Doug,
where on earth did you grow up that you didn't know that one head
light out was a excuse to get/give a kiss! Weird!
I seem to recall that two lights out, one front and one rear was
worth two kisses.
Bonnie
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328.65 | more clarification and new question | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Wed Dec 21 1988 16:08 | 14 |
| FRONT LIGHT = one kiss paddiddle/piddle etc....
REAR LIGHT = two kisses spadunckle/spedunckle etc.....
The rules are a little more involved also about whether the male
or female spotted it first!
*********************************************************************
Did anyone ever go "watch the submarines race"?????
*********************************************************************
justme....jacqui
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328.66 | Yep, there goes a snorkel now! | DMGDTA::WASKOM | | Wed Dec 21 1988 16:27 | 6 |
|
Even in high school, I couldn't quite believe it when my date suggested
that particular activity. (And I accepted with glee :-) )
Alison
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328.67 | HERE'S A COUPLE | SLOVAX::HAGUE | | Tue Dec 27 1988 13:06 | 13 |
| WUSEBAG - A cowardly person
DORKSQUAT - Similar to a couch potato
JARHEAD - Marines (particularly after first haircut)
HOOSEY - When you can't remember someone else's name in a conversation.
Out here we call a single headlight a PERDIDDLE and a single tail
light a PERDINKLE. (We LOOOVVVEE using RRRRRRRRRRRRRRR's out West,
rrrreally.
Louise
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328.68 | | RAINBO::TARBET | | Tue Dec 27 1988 14:07 | 12 |
| <--(.67)
The alleged origin of "jarhead" for a Marine is kinda interesting, I
think: spozedly it comes from the Corps having continued to use mules
to shift supplies long after the Army switched over to motor vehicles.
The practice was "explained" by the Army as being due to the Marines
not wanting to put their own relatives out of work.
Needless to say, the joke was nevvvvver told within Marine hearing.
=maggie
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328.69 | | ANKH::CRITZ | | Wed Dec 28 1988 09:50 | 20 |
| RE: 328.68
Maggie,
I just read it. Guess what? I'm on my way to your office
now. Someone has to defend the USMC. 8-)>
Do all of you know what the acronym USMC stands for? I didn't
think so.
USMC
Uncle Sam's Misguided Children
United Society for the Mentally Corrupted
Unorganized S#%+ and Mass Confusion
There are probably other, but I've been out for 19 years,
sew eye furgot.
Scott
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