Somnipathy
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Search
 
 

Display results as :
 


Rechercher Advanced Search

Latest topics
» Goodbye, 2012
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyTue Dec 18, 2012 4:38 pm by katsumi

» Newbie Forumer searching for heat
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyMon Oct 04, 2010 4:45 pm by janet986w

» You're Beautiful OST 1 & 2
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyMon Sep 13, 2010 11:54 pm by katsumi

» Lovelife status mo ngayon
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyMon Sep 13, 2010 11:38 pm by katsumi

» Decaf's dying. Everyone's busy on their businesses.
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyFri Aug 07, 2009 7:25 pm by katsumi

» What Do You Feel With Your Heart?
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyWed Dec 31, 2008 12:31 am by littlecut

» KAMUSTA NA KAYO NG EX NYO?
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyWed Dec 31, 2008 12:30 am by littlecut

» GUYS:anong gagawin nyo pag nalaman nyong buntis ang gf nyo
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyWed Dec 31, 2008 12:27 am by littlecut

» TO WHOM ARE YOU INLOVE?
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyWed Dec 31, 2008 12:24 am by littlecut

» 50 excuses in breaking up
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyThu Dec 04, 2008 8:56 am by enchantrice

» posible nga ba? dalawa ang mahal mo..sabay?!
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyThu Dec 04, 2008 8:48 am by enchantrice

» Auto Mouse.. (for gamers specially)
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained EmptyFri Nov 14, 2008 10:09 pm by Mr.NonSenSe

Poll

Pro reblocking ka ba?

10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained Vote_lcap5%10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained Vote_rcap 5% [ 1 ]
10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained Vote_lcap95%10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained Vote_rcap 95% [ 18 ]

Total Votes : 19

Social bookmarking
Bookmark and share the address of Somnipathy on your social bookmarking website

10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained

Go down

10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained Empty 10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained

Post by littlecut Sun May 25, 2008 12:17 pm

10 Slang Words and Phrases Explained

This is a list of the origins of 10 slang words or phrases that we all
use regularly. From insults to idiomatic expressions, these are common
in virtually all English speaking nations.

1. Idiot
Idiot originally comes from the Greek word Idiotes which was used to
refer to a person who was a private individual - or more specifically,
one who was so preoccupied with their own personal life that they would
not take part in the democratic process. In the biblical sense, the
word referred to an uneducated person. By the fourteenth century, it
could also refer to a clown, a layman (non-religious), or an
individual. Later, however, the Oxford English Dictionary gave it the
following definition which has stuck: “A person so deficient in mental
or intellectual faculty as to be incapable of ordinary acts of
reasoning or rational conduct”. When IQ tests arrived, a person scoring
less than 20 was regarded to have earned the “idiot’s score”.

2. Moron
Another Greek word, Moron meant foolish or stupid. It was first
propagated in English by an American psychologist Henry Goddard
(1886-1957). In his report to the Journal of Psycho-asthenics about his
study of the feeble-minded, he argued for the adoption of the word
which he defined as: “One who is lacking an intelligence, one who is
deficient in judgement or sense.” It was originally used to refer to an
adult with a mental age of between 8 and 12. The term has not really
made its way into high literature.

3. Cool
Who hasn’t used this word at least once in their life when speaking
highly of something? This meaning of the word is relatively new in
English, but not as new as you might think. The earliest record found
so far is from 1884 in the phrase ‘Dat’s cool!’. After that the next is
1902 from the lyrics of a song from the Black and White minstrel show:
“de way we dress is cooler”.

4. Third degree
To get the third degree means to be thoroughly questioned. The third
degree of something has been regarded as the upper limit (or extreme)
even since the time of Shakespeare when he wrote: “For he’s in the
thirde degree of drinke, he’s drown’d” - referring to a very drunk man.
Therefore, it is a natural progression that when referring to the most
extreme type of questioning, it would be referred to as the third
degree.

5. Slut
This unpleasant term is used these days to refer to an immoral woman.
But the origin of the term had a far less sinister meaning. It actually
meant a woman who did not keep her room tidy - though it is easy to see
that this could be a metaphor for immorality of a sexual type. In
Thomas Hoccleve’s 1402 Letter to Cupid, we read: “The foulest slutte of
al a toune”. This meaning eventually crossed to the word slattern which
retains its original meaning of being an untidy woman. In Victorian
English, sluts wool referred to the little piles of dust that gather on
the floor if it is not swept.

6. Well Heeled
According to the Chambers Dictionary, well heeled means “comfortably
supplied with money” and states that it comes from the word heeled,
meaning provided with a heel. Heeled also used to refer to being armed
with a revolver. A person carrying a set of guns was said to be
long-heeled. Despite the Oxford English Dictionary saying otherwise, it
appears that the origin of the term actually comes from Cockfighting.
In the early days of cockfighting, the owners would sometimes add spurs
to the feet of their birds, putting them at an advantage. If you did
not add spurs to the bird it was said to be naked-heeled. The use of
the term well-heeled in this context is first seen in print in 1866 in
a story by Mark Twain.

7. Kick the Bucket
This means “to die”. Many people consider the term to have come from a
condemned man standing on an upturned bucket which was then kicked out
from under his feet leaving him to hang, but there is no written
evidence that this is the case. In fact, it is more likely from a
different type of bucket entirely. In butchery, when a pig was
slaughtered it would be hung from a piece of timber called the bucket
beam. It is mostly likely that in his death throes, the pig’s feet
would bang against the rail to which they were tied. Therefore, kicking
the bucket was a term referring to the last actions of the pig before
he finally died.

8. Kinky
Originally this word simply meant something with a bend or twist,
probably coming from the Icelandic word meaning to bend your knees. In
time the word was adopted by the criminal world to mean something that
was illicit - for example a stolen car may have been referred to as a
“kinky car”. But then in 1959, Colin MacInnes changed the meaning of
the word for ever. In his book Absolute Beginners, he says: “Suze […]
meets lots of kinky characters […] and acts as agent for me, getting
orders from them for my pornographic photos.” From that time on the
word was associated with the steamy side of sex.

9. Underhand
Underhand means “surreptitious” or on the sly. The Chambers Dictionary
also adds “with the hand below the elbow or shoulder” which would
suggest doing something on the sly with your hand while distracting the
eye. But the actual origin of the term most likely comes from Archery.
A well known lover of archery, Roger Ascham (c1515-1568) wrote: “Thus
the underhande [shaft] must have a small breste, to go cleane awaye
oute of the bowe.” To shoot underhand was and is a common archery term.

10. Bob’s Your Uncle
Bob’s your Uncle generally means that something is simple or easy or a
“job done”. It is most likely that this phrase came about as a result
of nepotism (family favoritism). In the late 1800s, Lord Salisbury
(first name Robert) was prime-minister of Great Britain. After his
third term he was succeeded by his nephew Arthur. Arthur had been made
Chief Secretary of Ireland in 1886 which caused some scandal.
Suspicions arose that Robert was favoring his nephew Arthur. The term
“Bob’s your uncle” could be used at the time as a sly reference to this
charge of nepotism.
littlecut
littlecut
adik sa kape
adik sa kape

Female
Number of posts : 371
Age : 34
Location : Inside a Cup
Registration date : 2008-05-17

https://decaf.forumotion.com

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum