WORLD WIDE WORDS ISSUE 434 Saturday 2 April 2005 ------------------------------------------------------------------- Sent each Saturday to 22,000+ subscribers in at least 120 countries Editor: Michael Quinion, Thornbury, Bristol, UK ISSN 1470-1448 http://www.worldwidewords.org US advisory editor: Julane Marx ------------------------------------------------------------------- Contents ------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Feedback, notes and comments. 2. Weird Words: Vaccimulgence. 3. Noted this week. 4. Q&A: Claptrap. 5. Sic! 6. Q&A: Gorp. A. Subscription information. B. E-mail contact addresses. C. Ways to support World Wide Words. 1. Feedback, notes and comments ------------------------------------------------------------------- COPACETIC Linguists were dismissive of the suggestion by Professor Cohen, reported in last week's issue, that this odd American word might have been created by mangling the French phrase "copain(s) c'est épatant!". Some argued the French phrase was too uncommon to have been picked up by English-speaking troops in France in World War One, it not being an idiom or even a particularly natural expression. Jean-Charles Khalifa, a lecturer in linguistics at the University of Poitiers, pointed out that "copain" can never appear by itself as a form of address, but has to be prefixed by the definite article, which makes it unlikely that anybody would have abbreviated it in the way proposed. Others felt it would be equally unlikely for the final word of the French phrase to lose all but its first syllable. For the background to the expression, see my earlier piece, accessible through http://quinion.com?CPCT . SKY-BLUE PINK Many British subscribers responded to the piece last week about this mythical colour by telling me of elaborations of it that they recalled hearing as children, often half a century ago or more. Examples included "sky-blue pink with purple dots" or "sky- blue pink with yellow spots on". A popular form in northern England was "sky blue pink with a finny addy border", "finny addy" being a corruption of "finnan haddock", a type of cold-cured smoked fish, named after Findon in Scotland; presumably its yellowish colour was the reason for including it. Some said the expression was used by exasperated adults to children when pestered about colours; others that it was a hand-waving term meaning "whatever colour you want" or as a "mind your own business" reply to an unwanted question, or as a sarcastic description of some over-the-top or inappropriate colour. Several correspondents mentioned they had heard it used to describe "that difficult-to-reproduce colour of high clouds as sunset approaches", as Paul Davis put it. 4. Weird Words: Vaccimulgence ------------------------------------------------------------------- The milking of cows. This word popped up in a book I happened to be reading the other day, Appleby's End, one of the more skittish and fanciful works of the late Michael Innes (the pen name of the Oxford scholar J I M Stewart). Inspector Appleby is investigating strange goings-on in a rural neighbourhood and visits an old woman, of whom the local vicar says, "Since girlhood she has been celebrated in this part of the countryside for her skill in vaccimulgence." Putting it another way, she was a milkmaid. Mr Innes was not the first to employ this weird word, for it turns up in a whimsical letter written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in November 1796: "Will you try to look out for a fit servant for us, simple of heart, physiognomically handsome, and scientific in vaccimulgence. That last word is a new one, but soft in sound, and full of expression. Vaccimulgence! I am pleased with the word." Alas, few others have been, to judge from its limited appearances in print. It is, as you may guess, derived from Latin vacca, a cow (which is also the origin of vaccine, because the first was derived by Dr Jenner from cowpox to guard against the much more serious smallpox). The ending is from the Latin verb emulgere, to milk out, which - as well as being the ultimate origin of emulsion - is the root of another very rare word, emulgence, the action of milking out, as for example in extracting money from the unwilling. 3. Noted this week ------------------------------------------------------------------- BLOBOTICS Not the most attractive of formations, this surfaced in New Scientist last week. A British researcher, in my local university as it happens, is working on a chemical-based computer that uses ions rather than electrons, what he calls gooware or a liquid brain. He hopes one day to create a robot that senses and reacts to its surroundings using a computer brain made from semi- solid glop. That's what he calls blobotics. Let's hope he's as good with his research as he is with inventing mildly unlovable jargon. 4. Q&A ------------------------------------------------------------------- Q. Do you have any idea where the word claptrap comes from? I associate it with talking rubbish but I've no idea what a clap is - other than the obvious infectious disease - and why you would build a trap for one. [Bernie Baxter] A. It's certainly not that sort of clap. Your claptrap is indeed a trap to catch a clap, but it's the sort of clap you make by putting your hands together in appreciation. Its first appearance in print is in Nathan Bailey's dictionary of 1721 and his definition pretty much tells the whole story: "A Clap Trap, a name given to the rant and rhimes that dramatick poets, to please the actors, let them get off with: as much as to say, a trap to catch a clap, by way of applause from the spectators at a play." Such rhetorical devices or actorly flourishes were thought unworthy of the serious dramatist or thespian. A writer in the The New- England Magazine in 1835, fulminating against the star system that was contributing to the decline of the modern drama, complained that in order to feed the performance of the lead actor, "The piece must abound in clap-traps". Nor was the technique confined to the theatre itself: an article in Harper's New Monthly Magazine in 1855 about a new play said that "All the clap-traps of the press were employed to draw an audience to the first representation." And in 1867, back across the Atlantic in London, Thomas Wright wrote in Some Habits and Customs of the Working Classes that: "The Waggoner's entertainment, of course, embraced the usual unauthenticated statistics, stock anecdotes, and pieces of clap- trap oratory of the professional teetotal lecturers." The word developed from a figurative theatrical device to encourage applause into a more general term for showy or insincere platitudes or mawkish sentimentality directed at the lowest common denominator of one's audience. From there it was only a short step to the sense of talking nonsense or rubbish, though the older ideas are often still present. Incidentally, in the middle of the nineteenth century, 150 years after the word had first been recorded, some unsung backstage hero invented a mechanical device, a sort of clapper, that made a noise like that of applause (perhaps to encourage the real thing, though we are not told). Presumably it was similar to a football rattle. This also was called a claptrap. It has led some people into the mistake of suggesting that this device was the source of the word. 5. Sic! ------------------------------------------------------------------- Herb Trazenfeld mentioned the Dr Gridlock column in the Washington Post on Thursday, March 24. Dr. Gridlock advised "changing the oil every 3,000 to 6,000 miles, whichever comes first." A sentence in a report in last week's Sunday Times on unruly pupils troubled Diana Platts: "Teachers report being punched, kicked, splattered with eggs and spat on in the study by the Association of Teachers and Lecturers". Not a good example to set the kids. A headline in the Halifax Daily News, in Canada, dated 27 March: "Jen and Brad Split Official". Scott Milsom comments, "One wonders how the official's family are to be consoled." Mick Loosemore read a headline on CBC's online news site: SUSPECT FOUND DEAD, DENIES GUILT. He comments, "Just to confirm that, in Canada, investigators don't use any esoteric tools, the story summary continues thus: 'The prime suspect in a high-profile murder in Winnipeg more than 20 years ago has left a suicide note denying that he ever killed anyone'." Harry Westendorp found a sentence in The Age (Melbourne, Australia) on March 22 that he feels ought to be communicated to Her Majesty so that she can prepare herself for her imminent demise: "Parker Bowles is to marry Prince Charles, who will take the throne once his mother Queen Elizabeth dies, on April 8, and will initially be titled Duchess of Cornwall, becoming Princess Consort when Charles is king." While perusing his local paper, The Record of Sherbrooke, Quebec, on 18 March, Stephen Black discovered that the list of bestselling non-fiction books included Eat's, Shoots & Leaves. This suggested, as he says, "that there is at least one person who really, really needs to read that book." 6. Q&A ------------------------------------------------------------------- Q. I would be interested to hearing more about gorp. I was told that it stands for "good old raisins and peanuts". I ate this regularly with a sprinkling of dark chocolate chips while I was working on my Bachelor's degree. Given this is an acronym, perhaps the origin is spurious? [Katherine Phelps] A. This is a common term in the US for a type of high-energy snack, especially - as you imply - one containing raisins and nuts, plus chocolate. American hikers also know it as trail mix. The first example in the Oxford English Dictionary dates from 1972. It's said that it comes from the acronym you quote, but that's certainly spurious. It's just a well-meaning attempt to explain a word about whose origins the experts tend to shake their heads sadly. Some dictionaries point rather uneasily to some appearances of the word as a verb from earlier in the twentieth century. In 1904, the publication Dialect Notes noted that to gorp was to eat greedily; this is backed up by other references recorded in the Dictionary of American Regional English. A possible link is obvious enough, though a direct connection isn't recorded and etymologists have to be cautious. In turn, that word may one form of an older English verb variously spelled as gaup, gawp, gorp, gowp, gawk, or gauk. One basic meaning is to stare in a stupid or rude manner. But an earlier sense was of staring open-mouthed in witless astonishment. This seems to have led to gawp up, meaning to devour (presumably from the open-mouthed bit of the meaning), which just might have led to the early twentieth-century American dialect sense from which our sense may have later derived. Sorry to hedge my language so heavily, but we really don't know for sure. To end on a note of puzzlement and slight confusion, I've since found the word appears in the Appleton Post Crescent of Wisconsin in 1962 in an article that suggests an acronymic origin and a completely different meaning: "'Gorp' is taken by all campers and canoers. (Named for the flavors grape, orange, raspberry and pineapple, 'gorp' becomes a tasty thirst-quencher when mixed with cool water.)" It sounds as though the writer confused the foodstuff with a fruit-flavoured powder such as Kool-Aid, and thereby created another version of the folk etymology, but who knows? A. Subscription information ------------------------------------------------------------------- To leave the list, change your subscription address, or subscribe, please visit http://www.worldwidewords.org/maillist/index.htm . You can also maintain your subscription by e-mail. For a full list of commands, send a message containing the following two lines to listserv@listserv.linguistlist.org: INFO WORLDWIDEWORDS END The "END" ensures that the list server doesn't get confused by your signature or other text added to the outgoing message. This newsletter is also available as an RSS feed. The address is http://www.worldwidewords.org/rss/newsletter.xml . Recent back issues are archived at http://www.worldwidewords.org/backissues/ B. 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