dictionary
Adam’s
housecat n Also Adam’s
cat, ~ house chiefly S Atl, Gulf States See
Map =Adam’s
off-ox 1.1908
DN 3.285 eAL, wGA, Adam’s (house-)cat.
. . “He wouldn’t know me from Adam’s house-cat.” 1965–70
DARE (Qu. II26, . . “I wouldn’t know him from _____.”)
83 Infs, chiefly S Atl, Gulf States, Adam’s housecat;
LA25, OH90, VA69,
71, Adam’s cat; AL10, Adam’s house; FL48,
A housecat, [corr to] Adam’s housecat. [Of all Infs responding to the
question, 26% had less than hs educ; of those giving these responses,
56% had less than hs educ.]
antigodlin
adj, adv Also
annigodlin,
antegoddlin’, antigadlin [Var of
antigoglin,
perh infl by folk-etym: see sense
1 quot 1944]
chiefly
Sth, S Midl, West somewhat old-fash For varr see
DS
KK70, MM13, 14, 15 See also
antigod(d)le, antisigodlin
1 Of an object:
lopsided, askew, aslant, out of line.1917
DN 4.417 wNC, Antigodlin’, antigadlin’.
1944 PADS 2.17 sAppalachians,
Antigodlin, antigoglin, antisigodlin [ˈæntɪˌgɑdlɪn, -gɑg- ,
-saɪ-]. . . Out of plumb or square, slanting. Ibid 53 MO,
Anti-godlin. . . Not parallel to something having
well-established lines. My grandfather explained the term by saying it
referred to the idea of the “four corners of the earth” as created by
God; hence anyone who laid the foundation of a new building should make
it “square with the world”; otherwise it would be anti-godlin—against
the wish or example of God. 1949 PADS 11.17
CO. 1950 PADS 14.12 SC,
Antigodlin. . . Awry, askew, irregular. “Your skirt is
all antigodlin” (hangs unevenly). Variants are Sarahgodlin,
Sallygodlin, etc. 1952 Brown NC Folkl.
1.515 wNC, Antigodlin. . . Leaning,
not parallel. 1965–70 DARE (Qu. KK70,
. . Out of proper shape: “That house is all _____.”)
Infs MT5, SC31, 34, 39, Antigodlin;
(Qu. MM13, The table was nice and straight until he came along and
knocked it _____.) 9 Infs, Sth, S Midl, West,
Antigodlin; GA84, LA28, OK1,
TX4, Annigodlin; (Qu. MM15, . . At an angle:
“He nailed the board on _____.”) Infs GA72, TX36,
VA5, Antigodlin. 1967 DARE
File cwAL, Antigodlin—out-of-plumb, skeewhoned, cut
on the bias, whampus-jawed.
2 Cater-cornered,
diagonal(ly), at an angle. See also anti-walkus1905
DN 3.69 nwAR, Antigodlin, antigoglin
. . Diagonally. ‘We’ll have to go across antigodlin.’
Common. 1940 Sun (Baltimore MD) 21 Sept
10/7 (Hench Coll.), I have heard a farmer complain of a plow
hand who got drunk, “Why, he couldn’t plow a straight furrow; he went
antegoddlin’ across the field!” The word is not quite synonymous with
cater-cornered, nor is diagonal an exact equivalent; it means, rather,
off the true line that should be followed. 1958
McCulloch Woods Words 3 Pacific NW, Antigodlin’—Same
as catty-corner; also used to mean any wandering from a straight path. 1962
Atwood Vocab. TX 94, Many other words of unknown distribution
in the Eastern States are common in all or most of Texas; . . many
of them are missing from southern Louisiana. Some of these are . .
antigodlin. Ibid 116, Probably the main reason for
the decline [among younger speakers] of . . antigodlin
. . is that they are not sanctioned by dictionaries. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. MM14, . . “The drugstore is _____the gas
station.”) Infs AR31, CA208, IL96,
NC33, OK51, TX18,
Antigodlin; LA28, MS20, Antigodlin
across from; OK6, Antigodlin across; OK1,
Annigodlin. 1968 Adams Western Words,
Anti-godlin The cowboy’s description of diagonal or roundabout
movement. 1970 Tarpley Blinky 272 neTX,
To go from one corner of a field to another is to walk . . anti-godlin
[by 19.5% of infs]. Ibid 273, The response heard most
frequently among the least educated and the older informants outside
the city is anti-godlin.
Antony-over
n, exclam Also pronc-spp
Antney-over,
Antny-over, atni-over and simplexes
Antony,
Antny [Prob of Scots origin though earliest quot is US: cf
EDD,
SND]
chiefly sAppalachians See Map Note:
Antony-over
is a now uncommon form for the game most commonly called
anti-over.
The shouts accompanying this game are generally the same as its name,
and they share the same regional distributions. For common forms and
varr of both the game and the shouts, see
Andy-over, Annie-over,
anti-i-over, anti-over; for less
freq varr see also
Andrew-over, ankety-over,
and
DS EE22, 23a.
A As noun. A children’s game in
which a ball is thrown over a building to a player or players on the
other side. The name of the game is usually shouted as the ball is
thrown.1872
Schele de Vere Americanisms 579, Antony Over, a
game of ball played by two parties of boys, on opposite sides of a
schoolhouse, over which the ball is thrown. Used in Pennsylvania. Antony
is merely a proper name, . . and Over requires no
explanation. a1883 (1911) Bagby VA Gentleman
15, You don’t know how . . to play “Ant’ny over.” 1897
KS Univ. Qrly. 6.85, Ante over or ant’ny over:
name of a children’s game. 1899 (1912) Green VA
Folk-Speech 67, Antony over. . . A game of ball
played by two parties of boys on opposite sides of a house, over which
the ball is thrown. 1899 (1906) Ade Doc’ Horne
118 Chicago IL, Why, he and the alligator moved the
dresser out from the wall and began to play ‘ant’ny over’ with my eye. 1908
Fox Lonesome Pine 168 KY, The games were
new to June, and often Hale would stroll up to the school-house to
watch them—Prisoner’s Base, Skipping the Rope, Antny Over. 1915
DN 4.180 swVA. 1952 Brown NC
Folkl. 1.36, ‘Ant’ny Over’. . . game played at
several schools in Avery county during the fall of 1917. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. EE22) 23 Infs, chiefly sAppalachians,
Antny-over; NC17, 23, Antony-over; NC22,
Antony; KY7, Atni-over. 1969 DARE
Tape KY41, Antny-over—We get on one side with
something, usually a yarn ball . . with a little somethin’ in the
middle [that] would make it bounce and we’d throw it over and when we’d
get ready to throw, we’d holler “Antny,” the one that had the ball. The
other one on the other side’d say “over,” and they’d throw the ball
over. . . If we caught the ball, then we had a right to run around
to the other side . . and . . touch them [and] they had to
come to our side.
B As exclamation. 1 In
the game of Antony-over: the phrase called out when
the ball is thrown over the building.1946
PADS 6.4 VA, NC, Antney over . . The
full expression: “Antney, antney, and over she goes.” . . Common
among teen-age children. 1952 Brown NC Folkl.
1.36 NC (as of 1917), A member of the group having
the ball calls, “Ant’ny!” someone on the other side then cries, “Over!”
The first speaker calls out, “Over she comes!” and throws the ball over
the roof. 1965–70 DARE (Qu. EE23a) 14 Infs,
chiefly S Midl, Antny-over; WV1, 5,
13, Antny; NC22, Antony; GA72,
“Antny.” The other side hollers “Over!”; GA77,
“Antny.” The fellow on the other side says “Over!”; NC17,
22, Antony-over. 1966 Wilson Coll. csKY,
[The] thrower shouted “Ant’ny,” receiver shouted “over,” then threw it
[=the ball] back and shouted “Here she comes” or “Here comes.” 1969
DARE Tape KY41, When we’d get ready to
throw, we’d holler “Antny!” . . The other one on the other side’d
say “over,” and they’d throw the ball. 2
also Antny back: =pigtail exclam a.1967
DARE (Qu. EE23b, . . If you fail to get the ball
over the building and it rolls back, what do you call out?) Inf GA72,
Antny; GA77, Antny-back.
bealing
n formerly more
widespread, now chiefly Appalachians See Map An abscess or boil,
esp in the ear.1824
in 1956 Eliason Tarheel Talk 259 swNC, Your
negro woman Easther has been verry bad with a bealing on her brest. 1886
Amer. Philol. Assoc. Trans. 17.37 Sth, Bealing,
a ‘boil or sore.’ Very common in East Tennessee, and known
also in the West. 1902 DN 2.229 sIL.
1912 DN 3.571 wIN. 1914
DN 4.103 KS. 1927 AmSp
2.348 WV, He has a bad bealing on his hand. 1959
Hench Coll. VA Mts, A Ch[arlottes]ville
V[irgini]a doctor said that “a bealing [is] an infection of the ear.” 1965–70
DARE (Qu. BB37, When yellowish stuff comes out of a
person’s ear, he has a _____) 15 Infs, chiefly
Appalachians, Bealin’; VA1, Bealin’ in his
head; OH66, PA142, Bealing [15 of
18 Infs old]; (Qu. BB30, . . A hard, painful swelling
. . under the skin) Infs OH50, PA74,
Bealing; (Qu. BB33a, . . A swelling under the skin, bigger
than a pimple, that comes to a head) Infs TN12, WV13,
Bealing.
bear
claw n Also bear’s
claw, bear paw chiefly West, esp Pacific See
Map A large
sweet pastry shaped like a bear’s paw.1942
AN&Q 2.55 San Francisco CA, Another
variety [of “snail” pastry], with raisin filling, is (from its shape)
known as a “bear-claw.” 1946 AmSp 21.87 CA,
Bearclaw—a sweet bread shaped something like its name implies.
1965–70 DARE (Qu. H32, . . Fancy
rolls and pastries) 60 Infs, chiefly West, Bear
claws; IA13, MT5, WA3,
Bear paws; CA87, NY94, Bear’s
claws; (Qu. H28) Inf UT8, Bear claw. 1965
DARE File csWI, Bear claw—a type of
sweet-roll, paw-shaped, with indentations along one side. Sold by
bakeries. 1968 ID Enterprise (Malad City) 1
Feb 8/1, Hostess Bear Claws. . . 2 for 95¢. 1971
Bright Word Geog. CA & NV 177, Sweet roll . . [84
infs:] bear claw.
blue
norther n Also
infreq blue Texas norther, blue-tailed norther [blue
adj 3 + norther
a northerly wind] TX See Map See also norther Cf
blue blizzard, blue darter 1, blue
whistler 2 A
cold wind from the north that brings rapidly falling temperatures.c1856
in 1947 AN&Q 7.144 TX, On page 187 of
the second volume of Ordeal of the Union, Allan Nevins,
treating of the cattle country of Texas, refers to a record (from the
University of Texas Archives) written by an early cattle driver. The
driver speaks of a “blew-tailed norther,” which he encountered on a
cattle drive sometime around 1856. Such winds, he says, were “very
common in Texas 40 to 60 years ago.” 1873 Morrell Flowers
& Fruits 234 TX, A blue Texas norther
whistled around my ears. 1942 Perry Texas
90, Even more Texan are the blue northers that sweep out of the
Panhandle under a blue-black sky and sometimes slam the temperature
down thirty or forty degrees in a single night. 1965
Teale Wandering Through Winter 160 TX,
During one of our last days at Rockport, a blue norther struck. 1967–70
DARE (Qu. B18, . . Special kinds of wind) 16
Infs, TX, Blue norther. 1970
Tarpley Blinky 58 neTX, A strong cold
wind from the north. . . Blue norther. 1980
AZ Highways Feb 2, Missing too [from the cowboy legend] are
references to . . the icy grip of a “blue norther.”
buck
buck n
1 also buck; buck,
buck, how many . . up; bucket(t)y buck: A game usu
in which one player climbs another’s back and requires that person to
guess the number of certain objects out of sight; rarely buck
a player in the game. [See quot 1969]1899
Champlin Young Folks’ Games 120, Buck, a game
played by two person [sic], one of whom places his arms across his
breast, or rests them on his knees, and bends forward, resting his head
against a fence, tree, or wall. This is called “giving a back.” The
other player sits astride the back of the first, and holding up one or
more fingers, says, “Buck, Buck, how many horns do I hold up?” . .
The “buck” is sometimes blindfolded, and a third person often acts as
umpire, to see that there is fair play. . . In another form of the
game, a child hides his head in another’s lap, and the latter says:
“Mingledy, mingledy, clap, clap, clap, / How many fingers do I hold
up?” 1949 AmSp 24.314 cVA,
The game . . mummly, mummly, buck is known elsewhere. It
has been played . . in central Virginia for three generations.
. . The name for it there is bucketty buck. . . The
words of the version that I know are: Bucketty buck, bucketty buck, /
How many fingers do I hold up? 1957 Sat. Eve.
Post Letters sePA, Buck buck, how many’s up:
half of the players bent their backs; half of the players jumped on
their backs. If they guessed correctly the number of players on their
back, the benders became jumpers. Ibid MA,
Game—Buck, buck, how many passengers have I got up. 1958
KY Folkl. Rec. 4.174 seKY, “Buckety Buck,
Buckety Buck”—Two teams of boys, with one choosing to “face the wall,”
that is, the leader with hands against the wall, next one with head
between his legs and clasping his thigh, and so on. Then the Buckety
Buck is formed, the others, one at a time, run and jump on the backs of
it. When all are up, the one farthest up holds up some fingers of one
hand and says: “Buckety buck, buckety buck, / How many fingers do I
have up?” The one under him makes a guess. If he doesn’t get it right,
they must still “face the wall.” If he gets the correct number of
fingers, his team gets to ride the buckety buck. 1967–68
DARE (Qu. EE33, . . Outdoor games) Inf MD8,
Buck, buck, how many horns are up? Player puts hands against wall,
bends over; another person climbs on his back and holds up a number of
fingers. “It” must guess how many. If he succeeds, rider becomes “it”; MA3,
Buck buck: one player near lamppost; other players held the others’
waists. The end player would then leap onto the backs of the group and
then ask the group how many fingers. [1969 Opie Children’s
Games 298–99,
A remarkable feature of this game is that its oral formula, including
the meaningless word ‘buck,’ appears to have survived from classical
antiquity. . . In The Satyricon of Petronius Arbiter,
written about A.D. 65, . . there is an incident at Trimalchio’s
feast involving his favourite serving boy: ‘Trimalchio, not to seem
moved by the loss, kissed the boy and bade him get on his back. Without
delay the boy climbed on horseback on him, and slapped him on the
shoulders with his hand, laughing and calling out “Bucca, bucca, quot
sunt hic?”] 1971 AmSp 46.84 Chicago
IL, Buck-buck-how-many-fingers-up.
2 A game in which one
group of players climbs on the backs of a second group in order to
build as large a pile as possible or to cause the supporting players to
collapse. Nth, N Midl chiefly urban Also
called buffalo heap, Johnny-on-the-pony,
monkey pile1968
Chicago Daily Tribune (IL) 15 Sept mag sec 79, Buck buck.
. . [is] a guy’s game. Big guys. O.K., two lines, two teams. First
guy, No. 1 team, stand in front of the wall and brace your arms against
it. Head down. All the way. Next guy, in back of him, arms on his
shoulders, lean against him. Head on his back. O.K., next guy. One
team, six guys. No. 2 team, first guy, start running—from across the
street? O.K. Land on No. 1 team. Yeah, we held him. Next
guy—run—jump—land. That’s two; we’re holding two. This next one’s a big
kid, men. 1968–69 DARE (Qu. EE33, . . Outdoor
games) Infs PA76, 94, Buck buck; PA133,
Buck buck: team lines up against pole or fence; other team jumps on
their backs, tries to break them down; RI11, Buck
buck: boy leans against wall, people try to climb up on him. 1977–78
Foster Lexical Variation 43 NJ, The only
example . . of a boy’s game is the anarchic pile on
(Table 10). . . Omitted are five responses of buck buck,
horse, or Johnny hump a pony, a game with more
sophisticated rules but the same result. 1981 DARE
File Chicago IL, To play buck buck, you see how many
men you can pile on top of each other. Two guys on their hands and
knees form the base. The trick is to know how to build the pile right
so that other people on your team can climb up without tipping it over.
The team with the most people on its pile wins.
calf-rope,
holler v phr Also call
calf-rope, cry ~, say ~, yell ~;
also calf-rope exclam [Origin uncert] chiefly S Midl,
Gulf States See Map Cf uncle Esp in children’s
games: to give in, surrender; to capitulate.1878
Eggleston Roxy 44 sIN, [They] pummeled each
other in a friendly way until the challenger, finding that his
antagonist had entirely stopped respiration, was forced to “hollow
calf-rope,” that is, to signify by gestures that he was beaten. 1906
DN 3.129 nwAR, Calf-rope [kæfrop].
. . I give up, I surrender. “I’ll give it to him till he yells
calf-rope.” 1908 DN 3.296 eAL, wGA,
I’ll make him say calf-rope. 1933 AmSp
8.1.31 nwTX, In an argument, rassel, or any sort of
contest, a fellow could acknowledge his opponent’s superiority, and
usually stop hostilities immediately, by saying calf-rope. In extreme
cases, however, the conquered was made to spell it. Ibid 49 Ozarks,
Holler calf-rope. . . To acknowledge oneself beaten.
When one boy throws another down in a wrestling match, the defeated
wrestler hollers calf-rope, usually by crying “enough” or “I
give up.” 1942 Faulkner Go Down 109 nMS,
That I reneged, cried calf-rope, sold my birthright, betrayed my
blood, for what he calls not peace but obliteration, and a little food.
1950 WELS Suppl.,
Calf-rope [a response to the question] “Do you surrender?” [in]
children’s tussles. At branding time new calves were chased, roped,
trussed and rendered helpless for branding. Hence: “Calf-rope.” Used in
Texas. 1954 Harder Coll. cwTN,
Calf rope—[The truce term in] a children’s game in which the winner
forces the loser to scream “calf rope,” usually after the loser has had
his arm twisted until it is almost sprained or broken. Ibid,
To holler calf rope—to give up, surrender. “I made ’im yell calf rope.
I beat ’at old head in for ’im.” c1960 Wilson
Coll. csKY, Calf rope—Nuff! 1964
Wallace Frontier Life 97 cwOK (as of
c1900), She [mother] said that someone “yelled calf rope” if he had
given up or called for help. 1965–70 DARE
(Qu. EE20, When two boys are fighting, and the one who is losing
wants to stop, he calls out, “_____.”) 52 Infs, chiefly S
Midl and Gulf States, Calf-rope; AL20,
Calf-rope (old), uncle; GA86, I made him holler
calf-rope; KY89, You win, calf-rope—when somebody
twists your arm; LA2, Calf-rope [FW: Inf’s high
school aged grandson had not heard of this]; OK31,
Uncle (now), calf-rope (when I was young); TN8,
Calf-rope (old-fashioned), help (modern); TN16, Let’s
quit, I give up, calf-rope (more in rassling than in fighting); TX39,
Calf-rope—This is what you make the other fellow say if you want to
stop and you’re winning; very humiliating to have to say this; I give; TX42,
Calf-rope—winner makes loser say this, or offers to stop pummeling;
king’s ex; TX45, Calf-rope (old-fashioned) = I give
up. 1976 Brown Gloss. Faulkner 44, Calf
rope. . . One child seizes a handful of another’s hair
(probably originally a girl’s pigtail) and keeps pulling until the
victim says “calf rope.” From this usage, to say calf rope
gets the general meaning of to “give in, surrender, admit defeat.”
chicken
corn soup n, also attrib
chiefly PA See Map Cf rivel 1 A soup made with
chicken, corn and rivels (small pieces of egg and flour dumpling).1964
Amer. Heritage Cookbook 425, Chicken Corn Soup was a favorite
in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where it was often served on picnics
during the summer. A 4-pound stewing chicken . . 10 ears fresh
corn . . Rivels: 1 cup flour Pinch of salt 1 egg Milk. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. H36, Kinds of soup favored around here) 13
Infs, PA, Chicken corn soup; PA242,
Chicken corn soup—corn, chicken and rivels (egg and flour drops like
noodles); (Qu. H45, Dishes made with meat, fish, or poultry)
Infs MD27, PA13, 22, 29, 150,
Chicken corn soup; (Qu. H50, Dishes made with beans, peas, or corn)
Infs MD27, PA18, 136, 150, 242,
Chicken corn soup; (Qu. FF1, . . A “social”) Inf PA242,
Chicken-corn-soup supper; (Qu. FF16, . . Local contests or
celebrations) Inf PA7, Chicken-corn-soup supper.
Christmas
gift exclam
Pronc-spp or eye-dial C(h)ris’mus gif’, Christmas giff Also
Christmas give, ~ box, ~ present, ~
treat, less freq, Christmas-Eve gift chiefly
Sth, S Midl See Map Used as a greeting on
Christmas day; orig the first person saying it received a present from
the person(s) spoken to.[1844
Knickerbocker 23.16, Threatening to catch him for a Christmas
gift next morning, [she] disappeared up the stairs.] 1881
Harris Uncle Remus Songs 44 GA [Black], I’m
gwineter bounce in on Marse John en Miss Sally, en holler Chris’mus
gif’ des like I useter. 1884 Harrison Negro Engl.
270 SE, To holler ‘Cris’mus gif’ = to cry ‘Christmas
gift’. 1890 Howells Boy’s Town 112 OH,
The first thing when you woke you tried to catch everybody, and you
caught a person if you said “Christmas Gift!” before he or she did; and
then the person you caught had to give you a present. Nobody ever said
“Merry Christmas!” as people do now; and I do not know where the custom
of saying “Christmas Gift” came from. It seems more sordid and greedy
than it really was; the pleasure was to see who could say it first; and
the boys did not care for what they got if they beat. 1903
DN 2.309 seMO, Christmas gift!.
. . Merry Christmas! 1906 DN
3.130 nwAR, Christmas gift. . . Merry
Christmas. Negroes and the lower class of whites use the expression
literally as a begging formula. It is felt to be appropriate only on
Christmas morning. In other cases it means nothing more than “Merry
Christmas.” 1908 DN 3.298 eAL, wGA,
Christmas gift. . . A greeting on Christmas morning. The
person who is caught, i.e., who is greeted first, is expected to give a
present to the one who catches him. The custom is passing away. 1915
DN 4.181 swVA, Christmas gift. 1946
PADS 6.9 VA, NC, cGA, Christmas gift.
1949 Kurath Word Geog. 80, In the the North
and in most of the North Midland Merry Christmas! is the
universal Christmas salutation, and this expression is now freely used
by the younger generation in the South and the South Midland,
especially in urban areas. The simple folk of the South and the South
Midland still say Christmas gift! This salutation is also
still heard from older people in southern Pennsylvania (from the
Susquehanna westward) and is in rather common use in the Ohio Valley,
in West Virginia as well as in Ohio. It seems fairly clear that both
the South and the Midland had this expression from early times, and
that Merry Christmas! has largely displaced Christmas
gift! in Pennsylvania and on Delaware Bay in fairly recent times. 1950
PADS 14.19 SC, Christmas-give, -gift,
-giff. 1954 Harder Coll. cwTN,
Christmas-Eve gift. c1960 Wilson Coll. csKY,
Christmas-Eve Gift! Formerly common as a greeting on Christmas
Eve; usually a gift, like candy or nuts, was expected. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. FF10, . . To greet each other on Christmas
morning) 183 Infs, chiefly Sth, S Midl,
Christmas gift; GA70, MO20, TX98,
Christmas-Eve gift; PA13, My Christmas gift; MD20,
Christmas present; SC40, Christmas treat. 1970
Tarpley Blinky 233 neTX, Among the older
informants, Christmas gift is the usual greeting heard early
on Christmas morning. Christmas gift has increasing
popularity as the level of education and size of community decline.
. . Geographically, Christmas gift is most popular in
the northeastern counties. [Reported by 49.5% of infs. Christmas
present was given by less than 1%.] 1971 Wood Vocab.
Change 40 Sth, The usual Christmas greeting is Merry
Christmas. Less general but still reported is Christmas gift.
A few of the choices in Tennessee and Georgia are Christmas box.
Christmas gift, as natives of the region will point out, is a part
of a Christmas morning game and thus has a different function from that
of exchanging the greeting Merry Christmas.
cream
cheese n
1 Cottage cheese. esp
LA See Map1941
LANE Map 299, The map shows the terms cottage cheese
. . cream ch. . . and Irish ch. . . denoting
a kind of cheese made of the curds of whole or skim milk, curdled
either naturally or artificially. . . Cream cheese is
often described as finer and smoother than the other varieties. 1962
Atwood Vocab. TX 61, The southern Louisiana cream cheese
(also meaning cottage cheese) has penetrated into, but not much beyond,
the southeastern counties of Texas. 1965–70 DARE
(Qu. H60, The lumpy white cheese that is made from sour milk)
25 Infs, esp LA, Cream cheese. 1967
LeCompte Word Atlas 290 seLA, (Homemade
cheese made out of milk curd)—Cream cheese [17 of 21 infs].
2 See quot.1968
DARE FW Addit New Orleans LA, Cream
cheese: A breakfast dessert with cream over sour cheese—sugar is
spread over it. [FW: This is neither cottage cheese nor what is sold
commercially as “cream cheese”.]
dew
poison n Also dew
itch, ~ poisoning Pronc-sp dew pizen chiefly
S Midl, esp sAppalachians Cf dew sore Any of various rashes
or infections of the feet or legs, believed to be caused by dew; the
presumed agent causing such rashes or infections; rarely, a foot
disease of cattle.1912
Cobb Back Home 110 KY, He couldn’t even go
barefooted in summer, because if he did his legs would be broken out
all over with dew poison. 1922 (1926) Kephart Highlanders
303 sAppalachians, “Dew pizen,” presumably the poison
of some weed, which, dissolved in dew, enters the blood through a
scratch or abrasion. As a woman described it, “Dew pizen comes like a
risin’, and laws-a-marcy how it does hurt! . . My leg swelled up
black to clar above the knee. . . I lay on a pallet on the floor
for over a month. . . I’ve seed persons jest a lot o’ sores all
over, as big as my hand, from dew pizen.” 1946 PADS
6.11 eNC, Dew poison. . . Sores on
the feet, usually between the toes; caused by parasitic mites. Among
bare-footed boys. . . Common. 1954 PADS
21.25 SC, Dew poison [dɪu, dʒu-] . .
Ringworm on the feet, especially on the toes; athlete’s foot; an
infection caused by hookworm. Upcountry. In the Pee Dee this is called foot
itch. 1960 Hall Smoky Mt. Folks 50 eTN,
wNC, St. John weeds wet with dew . . will cause “sores
and risin’s” (“dew poisoning”) on the skin. c1960 Wilson
Coll. csKY, Dew poison. . . Ringworm
on the feet. Some cases may be hookworm. Also called ground-itch
(eetch) or toe-itch. 1966–70 DARE (Qu.
BB25, . . Common skin diseases) Inf SC32,Dew
itch; KY34, Dew poison; SC3, Dew
poisoning; (Qu. K28, . . Diseases that cows have) Inf KY86,
Dew poison—same as foot or hoof rot. c1974 Jones Ozark
Hill Boy 10 AR (as of c1920), We went barefooted
all summer and our stumped toes were too sore to bear shoes until
almost Christmas. . . We always expected to have cold frost-bitten
toes, blistered with dew poison before the first snow fell.
ditch
v
1 tr, intr: To leave or
stay out of (school) without permission; to be truant. esp c,sCA See
Mapc1939
in 1984 Lambert–Franks Voices 72 OK,
Us kids would
ditch school and go bum a ride off some truck driver and fool around
out in the field all day long. 1942 Berrey–Van
den Bark Amer. Slang 839.2, Absent Oneself; “Cut” Class.
. . Ditch. Ibid 839.3, Play Truant.
Ditch—, skip . . school. c1950 Atlas
Checklists WV, Ditch school. [Used by]
Black male, 31 years old. Mostly Bluefield State College. 1960
PADS 34.44 nCO, Ditch school ‘play hookey.’ 1965–70
DARE (Qu. JJ6, To stay away from school without an excuse)
Infs CA1, 14, 80, 96, 135, 177, 183, OH84,
Ditch; CA59, 66, CO39, IL44,
59, Ditch school. [6 of 13 Infs young] 1967 DARE
FW Addit IL, High School student says to ditch
school is to stay away without an excuse. 1971 Bright
Word Geog. CA & NV 200 c, sCA, He
. . skipped class . . ditched. 1978
DARE File sCA (as of 1940–59), In Long
Beach, California, we always spoke of ditching school. Playing
hookey was our parents’ and teachers’ term. “I ditched school
today. Did you ditch too?” someone might say. 1982 Grit
(Williamsport PA) 4 July 17, He’ll think back to the days when he
wouldn’t have minded “ditching school” and going fishing instead. 1984
DARE File AZ, The boys decided to _____
school one day: ditch. 1986 Capital Times
(Madison WI) 27 Mar 14/5 CO, He is their high
school’s biggest jerk. He treats others shabbily, ditches and fails
most of his classes, . . and bullies anyone who will tolerate it.
2 See quot.1967
DARE (Qu. Y18, To leave in a hurry: “ . . We’d
better _____.”) Inf CO27, Ditch.
dropped
egg n Also drop
egg [Prob from Scots dial; cf SND drap v. 5. (2) (b)
1824 →] chiefly NEng See Map somewhat old-fash
A poached egg.1884
Harper’s New Mth. Mag. 69.306/1 MA, Martha
was . . eating her toast and a dropped egg. 1896
(c1973) Farmer Orig. Cook Book 93, Dropped Eggs
(Poached). 1933 Hanley Disks neMA,
Dropped egg—take and put a pan of milk on the stove and boil and drop
the egg in and let it cook. 1941 LANE Map
295 (Poached Eggs), throughout NEng, Dropped
eggs. . . 1 inf, ceVT, Drop eggs. 1948
Peattie Berkshires 323 wMA, In Berkshire
. . you could not get a poached egg, but you could get a “dropped”
egg, which was the same thing. 1965 PADS
43.24 seMA, 6 [infs] poached eggs, 4 [infs] dropped
eggs, 1 [inf] dropped egg on toast. 1965–70 DARE
(Qu. H35, When eggs are taken out of the shell and cooked in
boiling water, you call them _____eggs) 40 Infs, chiefly
NEng, Dropped; NH15, Dropped egg on
toast. [33 of 41 Infs old] 1975 Gould ME Lingo
82, Dropped egg—Maine for poached egg, usually on toast. 1977
Yank ee Jan 73 Isleboro ME, The people on
Isleboro eat dropped eggs instead of poached.
duck on a rock n
Also duck on (the) rock, ducky on a (or the) rock,
duck the rock, duck off (the rock), dock on the
rock, duke on a rock [Engl dial duck a stone
used in games] chiefly Nth, N Midl, West See Map old-fash Also
called duck n 1,
duck on davy, ducks and drakes 3, duckstone Cf
double duck A game in which each
player throws a stone to try to knock another stone off a rock; see
quots.1878
Harper’s New Mth. Mag. 56.258/1 NY, ‘Duck on
the rock’ . . is far ahead of polo, pallone, lawn tenis [sic], or
Aunt Sally. . . The first thing to do . . is to find a rock
and a duck, also some smaller stones. . . put this largest stone
on the grass—so; that is our rock; now this smaller pointed one on the
top of it; that is our duck. You see, we are each to take a stone,
stand off as far as you like, and aim at the duck. If you succeed in
knocking it off, you must run and get your stone and be back at the
home before the duck is placed in position. 1883
Newell Games & Songs 189, Duck on a Rock. . . The
drake is a good-sized stone, which is placed on an elevated position,
or boulder. . . The “ducks” are stones about the size of the fist.
The object is to knock the drake off the rock. 1905 DN
3.78 nwAR. 1923 Acker 400 Games
109, Duck on a Rock. . . Each player has a “duck”—a
fair-sized stone. A large rock is chosen as the duck rock and a
throwing line is marked off twenty feet from this rock. 1950
WELS (Games in which you set up a stone . . and try
to knock it down) 12 Infs, Duck on a rock; 13 Infs, Duck on the
rock; 1 Inf, Ducky on a rock; 2 Infs, Ducky on the rock; 1 Inf, Duck
off the rock; 1 Inf, Duck off. c1960 Wilson Coll.
csKY, Duck on the Rock—common children’s
game. 1965–70 DARE (Qu. EE18, Games in
which the players set up a stone . . and then try to knock it down)
152 Infs, chiefly Nth, N Midl, West, Duck on a rock;
21 Infs, chiefly Nth, Duck on the rock; OR6,
PA234, Ducky on a rock; IN69, NJ2,
OH98, Ducky on the rock; UT3, Duck
on rock; IL35, NY68, Dock on the
rock; IN58, Duke on a rock; MA100,
Duck the rock. [Of all Infs responding to the question, 65% were old;
of those giving these responses, 82% were old.] 1966 DARE
File neIL, Dock on the rock. A children’s
game, reported by sixty-four-year-old woman. 1966 DARE
Tape MA118, One of the main things was duck on the
rock. . . We’d put one small rock on top of the big rock and then
we had to stand back with rocks; we all took rocks about the same size,
and we stood in a line and see if we could hit that one off the top.
elbedritsch
n Usu |ˈɛlbəˌdrɪč,
ˈælbə-| Also sp elbedritsche, dimin elbedritschel;
occas elfedritsch, -trich; elde(r)britsch;
elpentrecher; albedritsch, -tritsch; albertwitsch;
for addit varr see quot 1967–70 [PaGer, from Ger Elbe(n)tritsch;
see 1960 Hessische Blätter für Volkskunde 51/52 Textteil pp
170–217, esp 208–212; perh also infl by Scots eldritch weird,
unnatural] sePA See Map Cf snipe hunt
An imaginary
creature which, as a practical joke, a greenhorn is sent to hunt or
capture.1889
AN&Q 3.115/1 PA, Catching
Elfetriches.—Among the “Pennsylvania Dutch” this expression would imply
playing a trick upon a person, or making an April fool of him. The
“elfetrich” is described as a small animal, like a rat or a squirrel,
which can only be caught on a dark night, and in due time the hunter
discovers that it is a humbug. 1935 AmSp
10.170 PA, Other German words used in English are
. . elbedritsch, a mythological creature (to go elbedritsch
hunting is equivalent to going snipe hunting in the Middle West—someone
is left holding the bag). 1950 Klees PA Dutch
336, If a young man sufficiently guileless turns up, he’ll be set to
catching an elbedritsche, a mythical animal now extinct.
. . The difficulties of catching an elbedritsche are dwelt upon in
loving detail. Almost grudgingly the old men consent to the young man
joining the hunt. The greenhorn is given a bag in which to catch one
and taken far off . . and stationed behind a rock or tree while
the old men separate—or so he is given to understand—to drive the
elbedritsches toward him. There he is left literally holding the bag. 1953
AmSp 28.245 sePA, To go elpentrecher
hunting . . denotes waiting, burlap bag in hand, to snare
the shy and elusive elpentrecher, as time-consuming an occupation as
snipe hunting in other parts of the Union. 1959
Tallman Dict. Amer. Folkl. 105, Elbedritsche—A
mythological animal that young men of the Pennsylvania Dutch use as a
device for fooling naive or guileless visitors. 1967–70
DARE (Qu. CC17, Imaginary animals or monsters that people
around here tell tales about—especially to tease greenhorns) Infs PA22,
29, 36, 45, 54, Albedritsches; PA36, They would give
them a stick and light; when they [i.e., albedritsches] ran to this
light, they were to hit them with a huge stick; PA11,
Albertwitsch [ˈælbɚtˌwɪč]; PA150, Eldebritsches
[ˈɛldəˌbrɪčəs]; PA162, Elbedritschel
[ˈɛlbəˌdrɪčəl]—little animal; must have a partner, give him a burlap
bag—only found on the coldest night; PA243,
Elfedritsches [ˈɛlfədrɪčəs]—small creatures, can be caught in a bag;
initiate is left holding the bag in woods, waiting for elfedritsches;
(Qu. EE33, Other outdoor games) Inf PA22,
Albedritsch [ˈælbɪdrɪtč] hunts; (Qu. HH14, Ways of teasing a
beginner) Inf PA11, Albetritsches
[ˈælbɪˌtrɪčəz]; PA242, Elderbritsches—[we] left a
novice standing holding bag expecting elderbritsches to run by. 1967
DARE Tape PA64, There’s nothing like it. But
they made him believe it. . . They gave him a big bag and he had
to go out and hunt that albedritsch [ˈælbəˌdrɪč]. . . That’s an
old one. 1987 Jrl. Engl. Ling. 20.2.169 ePA,
Elbedritsch ‘a mythical creature often referred to as snipe’.
. . Even though 49% of the [100] subjects acknowledged using elbedritsch,
the large number of speakers who left the question blank demonstrates a
growing unfamiliarity with the concept.
feel
one’s keeping v phr
Also feel one’s keep(ings) [keeping support, food,
provision] chiefly S Midl somewhat old-fash To be in good health
and spirits; to feel confident, ambitious.1927
AmSp 2.354 wcWV, Feel his keeping
. . to be in excellent physical condition. “If he is feeling
his keeping so well, give him some more work to do.” 1942
Berrey–Van den Bark Amer. Slang 128.2, Be in good
health. . . feel one’s keeping. 1966–69 DARE
(Qu. GG19a, When you can see from the way a person acts that he’s
feeling important or independent: “He surely is _____these days.”)
Infs AL28, AR39, Feeling his
keeping; LA12, He feels his keeping; NJ57,
Feeling his keep (like a well fed animal); (Qu. KK28, Feeling
ambitious and eager to work) Inf GA72, Feelin’
his keepin’; AR31, Feelin’ his keepin’s. [5 of 6 Infs
old]
feest
adj Also sp
feast,
fees [Du
vies dirty, filthy; particular, fastidious]
chiefly
in Du settlement areas, esp NY, N Cent
1 usu with of:
Disgusted with; sated by; made nauseous by; nauseated; see also quot
1932.1859
(1968) Bartlett Americanisms 142, Feast. A
corruption of the Dutch vies, nice, fastidious. “I’m feast of
it,” is a literal translation of the Dutch Ik ben er vies van,
i.e. I am disgusted with, I loathe it. A New York phrase, mostly
confined to the descendants of the Dutch. 1903 DN
2.351, Feest. . . Used in Iowa, s.e., in the
expression, ‘I am feest of it.’ Also, ‘It makes me feest,’ the word feest
in this latter sentence being the equivalent of sick or ad
nauseam. 1904 DN 2.396 NY,
Feest [fist], adj. Sated. “I was feest of it,”
referring to maple sugar, of which the speaker had eaten a large
quantity. The word or expression was formerly common in central N.Y.,
but is now almost obsolete. 1932 Smiley Gloss.
New Paltz seNY, In speaking of something that he
was almost afraid of Herb Smith used the expression that he was “feast
of it”. . . It seems to mean being afraid or more particularly
leery of a thing or situation. 1933 Ibid ,
You ain’t feast to eat anything she cooks. 1943 AmSp
18.111, Marjorie Heebink of Baldwin, Wisconsin, writes that ‘The
expression I am fees (with no t) of that
is very common in this Dutch community. It is used to indicate strong
repugnance, usually of food. 1966 DARE File
nNJ, “I’m feest of that” means I’m revolted by that.
2 Untidy, unkempt;
filthy.1901
DN 2.140 cnNY, Feest . . Untidy,
not clean. “Her house is just feest.” St. Lawrence Co., N.Y.; heard
from a lady who formerly lived in Canada. 1969 DARE
(Qu. X52, . . A person . . who had been sick was looking
_____) Inf MI103,Fees [fis]. That’s Dutch,
meaning greasy, unkempt. [Inf old, of Du ancestry] 1985
DARE File ceWI, “That room is fees!” means
that it is absolutely filthy. [Inf of Du ancestry]
first-footer
n [N Engl and Scots dial; cf
EDD, SND] The
first person to enter a home on New Year’s Day; a visitor on New Year’s
Day or another special occasion; also first-footing visiting
or being the first to enter a home on New Year’s Day.1961
Sackett–Koch KS Folkl. 187, New Year’s Day custom called
“first-footing,” which consisted of taking a basket containing wine and
fruitcake and calling on all your friends early in the morning New
Year’s Day and having a drink of wine and a piece of fruitcake at each
house. 1967 Cerello Dakota Co. MN 58, This
shortbread is like my grandmother made to give to first footers when
they came to call on Hogmanay. . . When we were first married and
moved to Coates we had forty first footers call on us our first weekend
in town. . . There was always something special about greeting
first footers after the new year had begun. [Cerello: A custom brought
by the Scotch-Irish settlers in the 1870s; now obsolescent.] 1967
DARE Tape MN2, Dad used to do what they
always called first-footing. On New Year’s he would be the first one to
come in the door—[what] they’d call the first-footer. He would go out
and come in with a bottle of wine and some pennies and some biscuits or
cookies or something . . in his hand and then he’d give everybody
a penny; that was supposed to be luck. . . They wanted somebody
who was lucky to be the first footer. Dad was pretty lucky about
winning things, and so he was usually the one that did the first
footing.
flannel
cake n Also rarely
flannen cake [OED (at flannel sb. 6) 1792;
cf EDD flannel sb. 3 “A coarse oatcake”; SND flannen
bannock, flannen biscuit] chiefly Appalachians See
Map and Map Section Cf battercake 1 A pancake.1847
Briggs Tom Pepper 1.112 (DAE), A very delicate
species of food, which I tasted then for the first time, called flannel
cakes. 1895 DN 1.388 KY, NC,
Flannen cakes. 1932 (1946) Hibben Amer.
Regional Cookery 21, Flannel Cakes. . . In
Mississippi these are eaten for breakfast or supper with sausage or
chicken hash; towards the end of the meal they are served with syrup. 1941
LANE Map 289 sNEng, Flannel cake
[is used by 3 infs]. 1946 PADS 5.22 VA,
Flannel cake. . . A pancake; mostly west of the Blue
Ridge, also on Chesapeake Bay. 1949 Kurath Word
Geog. 69, Flannel cake (flannen cake) seems to be an old
Pennsylvania term. It is in regular use from the Susquehanna to the
Alleghenies and in the adjoining part of Maryland, including Baltimore.
It has been carried southward into the Blue Ridge and along Chesapeake
Bay, and westward to the upper Ohio River. In the Pennsylvania German
area and the vicinity of Philadelphia flannel cake still has
some currency but has been yielding ground to hot-cake and pancake.
1951 AmSp 26.253 NY,
Eastern Pennsylvania [words found in Upstate NY] . . flannel
cakes (pancakes). 1953 AmSp 28.249 sPA,
Flannel Cakes. . . Hot cakes, griddlecakes. Not applied
to buckwheat cakes or corncakes. In general use. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. H20b) 17 Infs, chiefly Appalachians,
Flannel cakes; MD17, Flannel cakes—same as pancakes,
wheat cakes, and flapjacks; the standard wheat pancakes; MD28,
Flannel cakes—usually made with sour milk and soda; NY1,
Flannel cakes—made with corn meal; PA110, Flannel
cakes are thick—[we] slice them; VA33, Flannel cakes
are made of the same dough as waffles; WI49, Flannel
cakes—very puffy [Inf has read of them]; WV8, Flannel
cakes—made thicker than flapjacks. 1973 Allen LAUM
1.283 Upper MW (as of c1950), Flannel cakes,
an old Pennsylvania term likely to have been carried by the
Scotch-Irish down the Shenandoah Valley, is used by . . [4 infs]
with Midland backgrounds.
flea
in one’s ear n [OED
c1430 →] chiefly NEast See Map old-fash A hint, warning,
disquieting disclosure; a rebuke.1822
Irving Bracebridge 1.229 NY, If you had
taken a friend’s advice, you’d never have come away from Doncaster
races with a flea in your ear! 1927 AmSp
2.362 wcWV, To warn a friend against treachery. “I
will put a flea in his ear when I see him again.” [1933
Cobb Murder 213 seNY,
I think possibly
I may have a flea to put in his ear.] 1948
Funk Hog on Ice 181, To be sent away with a flea in the ear
indicated that one had received a sharp and stinging reproof or rebuff,
often wholly unexpected. . . Now we use it to carry no greater
meaning than that of warning. 1950 WELS (“He
didn’t guess that she was up to anything, but I _____.”) 2 Infs, WI,
Put a flea in his ear. 1954 Harder Coll. cwTN,
Put a bug (flea) in his ear: To give a hint. 1965–70 DARE
(Qu. JJ27, To give somebody a hint for his own good: “He had no
idea that she was up to anything, but I put _____.”) 30 Infs, chiefly
NEast, A flea in his ear. [25 Infs old]
flug
n Also sp phlug Dust or lint that
collects in pockets, under beds, and in similar places; also fig.1934
Wylie Finnley Wren 301 neNJ, The ones we
talked about. Where are they now? What are they doing? Bitter fragments
on the Lethe. Chips and gobbets. Human flug. 1952 We’re
Not Married [Movie] (DAS at phlug), Did you
drop some flug in my cup? 1952 San Francisco
Examiner (CA) 4 Dec 33/1, [Herb Caen’s column, subtitle:] Pocketful
of flug. 1970 DARE File, Flug
[flʌ:g]—dust curls under furniture. Heard from “Southern people” in
California. 1973 San Francisco Chronicle
(CA) 19 Nov 29/1 [Herb Caen’s column], In answer to questions from a
few mildly interested readers, “phlug” is the stuff that collects in
the pockets of aging suits and overcoats. 1980 DARE
File NYC (as of 1930s), As for phlug, or flug,
in high school and college this was (specifically) the lint that
collected in the navel. 1982 Smithsonian
Letters KS, A friend from Kansas calls the dust rolls
“flug.”
flying
jenny n Also
flying
jinny, ~ jinnie, ~ ginny [
jenny 1,
prob from its earliest form being a pole that was ridden astride (see
1a
quot 1946)]
1 An amusement device in
which riders are whirled in a horizontal circle; a merry-go-round; spec:a Any
of various simple contrivances in which the riders supply the motive
power. chiefly Sth, S Midl See Map Also called flying
board, ~ Dutchman 3, ~ frappy,
~ horse 1b, ~ sally, jenny
6, spinning jenny, whirling ~
1876
in 1969 PADS 52.52 neIL, We had a spring
board flying jinnie etc we had lots of fun. 1916 DN
4.268 New Orleans LA, NC, Flying jinny. . .
A home-made form of carousel. 1940 Hench
Coll. VA, Flying jenny or jinny. [Drawing shows
a pole with a rotating hub at the top, from which hang ropes or chains;
children run holding on to these and are swung outwards by centrifugal
force.] 1946 PADS 6.14 eNC,
Flying jenny. . . A sixteen-foot pole five inches in
diameter with a hole through the center. In this hole was a wooden or
metal peg, which rested on a stump or some other wooden foundation. The
jinny was rotated by some children while others rode it. 1954
PADS 21.28 SC, Flying jinny. 1958
PADS 29.10 TN, Flying jinny. . . It
was a wheel or board on a post on which people rode round and round. c1960
Wilson Coll. csKY, Flying-jenny.
. . Sometimes made by cutting down a slender sapling and
using the stump for the base, the rest of the tree for the moving part.
1965–70 DARE (Qu. EE32, A homemade
merry-go-round) 107 Infs, chiefly Sth, S Midl,
Flying jenny (or jinny); (Qu. EE31) Inf GA44,
Flying jenny. 1966–67 DARE Tape FL8,
The board that was put on this stump was a wide board . . , and a
hole was bore into that, and then to hold onto the stump you’d need a
long iron pin. . . The pin held it on the stump. . . It was
known as a flying jinny. . . A child would sit on either end. It
would just whirl round. . . A third person was usually needed to
push; TX3, [Inf:] They called ’em flying jennies,
where they turned round. [FW:] Was it something up on a pole, that they
could go round on that way? [Inf:] Yes. . . It was a seat that
turned around and around like that. 1969 PADS
52.52 LA, [Footnote to flying jinnie:] Saw
off a straight, four or five-inch-thick tree about two and a half feet
from the ground; whittle the top of the stump to form a pivot several
inches high; trim the tree trunk to form a long pole; bore a hole
through the pole at the point of balance; place the bored pole on the
pivot. This piece of makeshift playground equipment was used as a
combination seesaw and merry-go-round. 1980 Foxfire
6 201 nGA, Mack Dickerson remembers a small oak
stump about four feet high. They used a plank with a hole drilled in
the center. The flying jenny would last longer when they used axle
grease. b
A carnival ride powered by an animal or motor. Also called flying
horse 1a1906
DN 3.136 nwAR, Flying jinny. . . A
merry-go-round. Originally the propelling power was furnished by a
mule. 1908 DN 3.311 eAL, wGA,
Flyin(g)-jinny. . . A merry-go-round. Universal. 1939
FWP Guide TN 168 (as of c1869), Thoni designed and carved the
first wooden animals to stand upon a “Flying Jenny” (merry-go-round). 1945
Sat. Eve. Post 9 June 17/3, Today, the carrousel—or “flying
jinny” as she is known in the trade—is lighted by as many as 2200
electric bulbs. 1953 AmSp 28.116 [Carnival
talk], Flying Jenny. 1959 Faulkner Mansion
317 MS, Them frustrated dogs [were] circling round
and round the automobile like the spotted horses and swan boats on a
flying jenny. [1978 AmSp 53.198 cwAR,
I can remember
they had those merry-go-rounds pulled by a mule, a jenny. . . They
had little double seats with a tent hung over it, and this jenny was
inside.]
2 See quot.1930
Shoemaker 1300 Words 23 cPA
Mts (as
of c1900), Flying-ginny—A small wind-mill,
sometimes used at mountain communities to draw water or run a chop-mill.
fox
and geese n Also
fox
and goose
1 also fox: A
board game in which markers represent geese and a fox or foxes; usu the
fox can capture geese by jumping them, while the geese try to hem in
the fox so it cannot move or jump. [OED 1633 →]1825
Neal Brother Jonathan 1.7 CT, Peters had
beaten him . . first in argument . . ; then, at fox and
geese; then, at morris; then, at checkers, or draughts. a1874
in 1949 PADS 11.32 cME, She beat me bad at
fox and geese,/ But I beat her at morris. 1949 (1958)
Stuart Thread 96 KY, We made our
fox-and-goose boards and we played with white, yellow, and red grains
of corn. 1954 Harder Coll. cwTN,
Fox and geese. . . Table game played with corn grains
and on a specially made board. 1965–70 DARE
(Qu. DD37, . . Table games played . . by adults)
Infs IL73, NY101, NC31,
54, PA63, VT16, WI26,
WV7, Fox and geese; OK1, TN14,
VA27, Fox and goose; AL32, Fox and
geese—two fox and twenty geese. Try to hem the fox up. If the fox jumps
the geese, he takes [them]; (Qu. EE38a) Inf IN19, Fox
and geese; NC72, Fox and goose; VA24,
Fox; (Qu. EE39) Inf NC72, Fox and goose; KY89,
Fox and geese; KY40, Fox and goose—old-fashioned. Two
foxes and twenty-two geese. Geese would try to trap foxes while foxes
tried to get geese. Played with corn kernels. 1967 DARE
FW Addit LA1, Fox and geese—played with grains of
corn or buttons on a cardboard court. The fox chased the geese and the
geese tried to hem the fox in. 1969 DARE
Tape KY5, Fox an’ goose. . . Fox would be over
here in this corner . . he could go anywhere he wanted to but the
old goose, you’d have to move it a certain way all the time. 1980
Foxfire 6 285 nGA, Fox and Geese
. . was usually played at the mill while people were waiting
to have their corn ground. . . The miller was usually the fox and
he was usually the winner because he got so much practice at it.
2 also fox and the
geese, ~ goose, fox-and-goose ring, fox-the-goose:
A tag game in which “foxes” chase “geese” in a wheel-shaped network of
paths, usu marked out in deep snow. [Similar tag games, but without the
marked paths, are called fox and geese in Engl dial] chiefly
Nth, N Midl, Plains States, Rocky Mts See Map1846
Knickerbocker 27.279, Recollections of early school-days;
. . fox-and-geese in the deep snow, ‘by the whole company.’ 1950
WELS (Games played in the snow) 34 Infs, WI,
Fox and (the) geese; 8 Infs, Fox and (the) goose; [1 Inf, Fox chasing
the goose]. [Only 9 of 52 Infs did not mention this game; 22 described
it as in quot 1953.] 1953 Brewster Amer.
Nonsinging Games 54 WI, Fox and Geese.
. . The base and the paths . . are made by trampling
down the snow. . . The center spot . . is the “hen house.”
. . The “fox” tries to tag any “goose” who may try to stray from
this safety zone. Both fox and geese must stay on the paths at all
times. If the former succeeds in tagging a goose, the latter becomes a
fox and must aid the captor. 1954 Harder Coll.
cwTN, Fox and geese. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. EE26, . . Games . . children play in
the snow) 286 Infs, chiefly Nth, N Midl, Plains States,
Rocky Mts, Fox and geese; 15 Infs, scattered N Cent,
West, Fox and goose; 8 Infs, 4 MO, Fox and
the goose (or geese), CA136, Fox-and-goose
ring; IL63, Fox-the-goose; (Qu. EE27, Games
played on the ice) 14 Infs, scattered Nth, N Midl
Fox and (the) geese; NJ1, Fox and goose; (Qu. EE2)
Infs IA9, MA42, NY232,
Fox and geese—played in snow; CO14, Fox and geese—a
pie-shaped thing with alleys; (Qu. EE33) Inf NY52,
Fox and geese—played in the snow. Tread a circle with spokes. The fox
tried to catch somebody before they got back to the center hub; (Qu.
EE1) Inf MI92, Fox and geese—winter game.
3 also the fox and
the goose: A tag game in which the “geese” form a line and the
“fox” tries to tag the hindmost “goose.”1885
Warner Wide World 315, There was a general call for “the fox
and the goose.” . . [The fox’s] business was to catch the train of
the goose, one by one, as each in turn became the hindmost; while her
object was to baffle him and keep her family together, meeting him with
outspread arms at every rush he made to seize one of her brood. 1909
(1923) Bancroft Games 92, Fox and geese. . . One
player is chosen to be fox and another to be gander. The remaining
players all stand in single file behind the gander, each with his hands
on the shoulders of the one next in front. . . Only the last goose
in the line may be tagged. . . A good deal of spirit may be added
to the game by the following dialogue, which is sometimes used to open
it: . . “Geese, geese, gannio!” . . “Fox, fox, fannio!”
. . “How many geese have you today?” . . “More than you can
catch and carry away.”
4 =fox in the
morning 1.1952
Brown NC Folkl. 1.79, Three or four of the best runners
challenge the crowd to a game of Fox and Geese. Bases are arranged and
the challengers are foxes, while the rest of the players are geese. The
foxes call from their base: “Goosey goosey gander!”/ Geese: Fox over
yander./ Foxes: How many geese you got?/ Geese: More’n you can catch./
The geese all run out and the foxes chase them.
5 A children’s ring
game, perh duck duck goose or a variant of it.1950
WELS (Games in which the players form a ring and either
sing or recite a rhyme) 3 Infs, WI, Fox and
geese; 1 Inf, Fox and goose. 1965–70 DARE
(Qu. EE2, Games that have one extra player—when a signal is given,
the players change places, and the extra one tries to get a place)
34 Infs, scattered, but esp Nth, N Midl, Fox and
geese; (Qu. EE1, . . Games . . in which they form a
ring, and either sing or recite a rhyme) Infs IA3,
NJ6, PA71, Fox and geese; OH1,
Fox and geese—like drop the handkerchief; WI47, Fox
and geese—same game [as EE2]; WI70, Fox and geese—no
rhyme or song. [Note: It is possible that some of these Infs are in
fact referring to fox and geese 2 or some other
game.]
6 A children’s game
played in the water.1906
DN 3.136 nwAR, Fox and goose. . . A
game played in the water. 1967–69 DARE (Qu.
EE28, Games played in the water) Infs AL2, IL45,
OH87, PA26, 104, Fox and geese; MO2,
Fox and goose; CO21, Fox and geese—“it” [was] on
bank, geese had to come out; CT5, Fox and geese—also
played on dry land.
7 A children’s hiding
game.1968–70
DARE (Qu. EE12, Games in which one captain hides his team
and the other team tries to find it) Infs CA174,
MD33, NJ48, PA134,
Fox and geese [DARE Ed: Two Infs were doubtful about this
resp.]; CT6, Fox and geese—one group of foxes tries
to find group of geese; (Qu. EE13a, Games in which every player
hides except one) Inf KY80, Fox and geese =
hide-and-go-seek.
French
harp n
1 A harmonica. chiefly
W Midl, TX, Cent See Map1891
Riley Swimmin’-Hole 11 IN, A slice of
worter-melon’s like a frenchharp in theyr hands. 1905
DN 3.80 nwAR, French harp. . . Harmonica.
Common. 1908 DN 3.313 eAL, wGA.
1912 DN 3.568 MS, MO. 1915
DN 4.183 swVA. c1940 Hall
Coll. wNC, eTN, I was told of an accomplished
player . . known as ‘French Harp’ Slim, who . . has made some
phonograph records. 1958 Humphrey Home from the
Hill 51 neTX, And from his jumper pocket he
would draw his battered old French-harp . . and sound a chord. c1960
Wilson Coll. csKY, French harp. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. FF7, A small musical instrument that you blow
on, and move from side to side in your mouth) 182 Infs, chiefly
W Midl, TX, Cent, French harp; (Qu. HH30) Infs KY78,
TX1, VA42, French harp. 1973
Allen LAUM 1.207 (as of c1950), Mouth harp . . dominates
the Midland speech area [in the Upper Midwest] except for the extreme
southeastern sector, where South Midland speech is typical and where
the accepted form is French harp. 1986
Pederson LAGS Concordance (Harmonica) 336 infs, chiefly
inland Gulf Region, eTX, French harp(s).
2 A jew’s harp.1965–70
DARE (Qu. FF8) Infs AL10, AR47,
IL60, 82, KS18, MS84,
PA94, 247, WA18, French harp. 1971
Wood Vocab. Change 40 Sth, A harp with a
kind of tine which is plucked while one blows against it, is known
first as a jew’s harp and second as a juice harp.
. . French harp is not reported in Florida [but occurs
occasionally in the other seven Sthn states investigated]. 1986
Pederson LAGS Concordance (Jew’s harp) 5 infs, Gulf
Region, French harp(s).
fritz,
on the adj phr, adv phr
[Orig unknown] chiefly Nth See Map Cf kaput B
Out of order; in
(or into) a state of disrepair or ruin.1903
R. L. McCardell Conversat. Chorus Girl 15 (OEDS),
They gave an open air [performance] that put our opera house show on
the Fritz. 1905 (1906) Green At the Actors’
Boarding House 359 NYC, What with me ketchin’
’em cookin’ spaghetti on the gas an’ tearin’ up the bedspreads to use
fur makeup towels, they’re puttin’ the place on the fritz! 1919
Kyne Capt. Scraggs 73 CA, I got my arms
left, even if my feet is on the fritz. 1950 WELS
(“My sewing machine is _____.”) 8 Infs, WI,
On the fritz. 1965–70 DARE (Qu. KK19,
. . Temporarily out of order: “My sewing machine _____.”)
75 Infs, chiefly Nth, Is on the fritz; MA54,
Went on the fritz; (Qu. KK20b, Something that looks as if it might
collapse any minute: “Our old washing machine is _____.”) 10 Infs,
Nth, On the fritz; [NY86, Fritz;]
(Qu. BB20, . . Overactive kidneys) Inf AZ2,
Waterworks on the fritz. 1980 Milwaukee Jrl.
(WI) 3 July Green Sheet 2/1 nwOH, Today our TV set
began acting up with the picture all scrambled. Dad fiddled with the
controls, as he always does, but finally said: “This time it’s really
on the fritz. We’ll have to call the repairman.”
frowy
adj1
Also sp
froughy, frowey [
frough, frow
brittle, fragile]
chiefly NEng
1 Esp of wood: spongy,
brittle; inferior. arch Cf DS KK71816
Pickering Vocab. 97, Froughy . . is in very
common use in many parts of New England. . . It is
doubtless a corruption of Frough. . . “Frough;
loose, spungy; Frough wood; brittle.” Ray’s North
Country Words. 1857 (1949) Thoreau Jrl.
10.14 MA, A lumberer called some timber “frowy.” 1889
(1971) Farmer Americanisms 255, Froughty [sic—prob
erron for froughy].—Spongy, brittle, or, in fact, applied to
anything that is of inferior quality. A North of England provincialism,
and colloquial in New England.
2 Rancid; spoiled;
musty, foul-smelling. Cf frousty 1, frowzy1848
Bartlett Americanisms 150, Frough. Froughy. . . ‘Froughy
butter,’ is rancid butter. [Froughy] . . is in common
use in many parts of New England. 1866 Stowe Little
Foxes 253 NEng, Mrs. Dayton is a decent
housekeeper, and so her bread be not sour, her butter not frowy. 1913
DN 4.4 ME, Frowy. . . Partly
decomposed and ill-smelling. 1916 DN 4.302 CT,
MI, MA, Frowy. . . Rancid. 1932
DN 6.283 CT, Frowy plate. “One
with grease under the glaze; when it is warm you can smell it.” 1941
LANE Map 306, Meat that has begun to decay or ‘go bad’.
. . 1 inf, ceMA, Frowy, mother’s term
for spoiled sausage meat or for salt pork beginning to smell; 1 inf, swMA,
Frowy, of pork. Ibid, 12 infs, chiefly
swNEng, Frowy [of rancid butter]. 1943 AN&Q
3.7/2 NEng (as of c1925), Frowey (spoiled). 1959
VT Hist. new ser 27.136, Frowey. . . Rancid,
as in lard or butter. Rare. Washington; Windsor. 1965
Needham–Mussey Country Things 135 VT, One
time he come out in the morning, and the air was frowy with skunk, and
he said it smelled like an automobile had been by. 1973
Allen LAUM 1.287 nwIA (as of c1950), Frowy,
recorded once . . is a . . reflection of a New England minor
variation. . . Its range of meaning seems to include both that of rancid
and that of spoiled.
futz
v, hence vbl n futzing
Usu |fʌts|; rarely |futs| [Etym uncert; cf Ger
furzen to
fart, and see quot 1985
Jewish Lang. Rev. at
1]
esp
Nth Cf
putz v
1 usu with around,
rarely about: To fool around, idle, waste time. Cf fuss
v C61932
Farrell Young Lonigan 119 Chicago IL, Studs
kept futzing around until Helen Shires came out with her soccer ball. 1937
(1958) Levin Old Bunch 80 Chicago IL, There
was a fellow that never wasted time. No fuzzy futzing around. 1943
AmSp 18.43 NYC, I myself have heard this
expression [=futz around] employed by adolescent Negro and
Italian boys. The Yiddish [=arumfartzen] does get around. As
with the word ‘nertz,’ . . ‘futz’ has undergone an internal change
to make it less obviously vulgar. . . The German word is furzen.
1950 WELS (“He doesn’t have much to do
today, so he’s just _____.”) 1 Inf, ceWI,
Futzing around. 1967–68 DARE (Qu. A10,
. . Doing little unimportant things) Inf IN68,
Futzing around; NY34, Futzing; CA15,
[ˈfutsɪŋ] around; it may be Yiddish; (Qu. KK31, . . “He
doesn’t have anything to do, so he’s just _____around.”) Inf PA46,
[ˈfʌtsɪŋ]; PA82, Futzing. 1976 NY
Times (NY) 31 Oct sec D 32/5 NY, I futz about,
move things, think up another pose, reposition the camera. 1985
NYT Mag. 1 Dec 16, The president . . discussing presummit
maneuvering, told a group of wire-service reporters that the time had
come to “stop this futzing around.” 1985 Jewish
Lang. Rev. 5.316, One possibly correct explanation of these
meanings [of futz] if [sic] that they result from emulation
of fuck: if fuck ‘to copulate’ = futz ‘to
copulate’ and if fuck around means ‘to idle, loaf, etc.’,
then futz acquires the[se] meanings . . by analogy.
. . Another explanation . . is that the verb futz
is a euphemism of fuck. Thirdly, there is the possibility of
Yiddish influence. Ibid 318, Eastern Ashkenazic English fart
around is a translation of [Eastern Yiddish] arumfartsn zikh.
. . [I]f Yiddish or Eastern Ashkenazic English is relevant
in any way, there must have been either deliberate phonological change
or blending. . . I suggest . . that Eastern Ashkenazic
English fart around is indeed relevant [to the etymology of futz
around]. 1988 DARE File ceWI
(as of c1920), When I was a child, my Uncle Fred often said, “You kids!
Quit futzing [ˈfʌtsɪŋ] around!” or “Don’t futz with that!” My mother,
as well as others in our town, also used the expression; many of us
still say it. I always thought it must be a euphemism for that other
word, and I think it comes from the German.
2 with with:
To mess with; to tinker or trifle with.1974
Esquire 81.4.106/2, [Dan] Rather protested this caprice. He
would film what he damn well pleased. . . Nobody futzes with Dan
Rather and gets away with it. 1980 Chr. Sci.
Monitor (Boston MA) 4 Mar 16/1, In spring there is the garden. In
fall the leaves. But in winter, unless you’re into igloo-making,
futzing with the snowblower, or carving out figure eights on the pond,
what is there to mess with? 1984 Wall St. Jrl.
(NY NY) 26 Jan 19/3, [Advt:] Macintosh was designed for anyone who
handles, collects, distributes, interprets, organizes, or otherwise
futzes with information. 1988 DARE File csWI,
Don’t futz with it; you might break it. 1988 [see 1
above].
garden
house n [Also Engl
dial; OED garden-house 1. b 1886] chiefly Mid Atl See
Map A privy.1899
(1912) Green VA Folk-Speech 191, Garden house. . . A
privy, as they are usually built in a garden of a country-house. 1946
PADS 5.23 VA, Garden house. . . A
privy; common everywhere except the southern part of the Piedmont. 1948
AN&Q 8.172 VA, I remember seeing an old
Negro . . clean a privy on my aunt’s farm. He told me he was
“movin’ de honey from de garden house.” 1949 Kurath Word
Geog. 53, Garden house, in Virginia and northeastern
North Carolina. 1954 PADS 21.28 SC,
Garden house. 1956 McAtee Some Dialect
NC 18, Garden house. 1965–70 DARE (Qu.
M21b, Joking names) 13 Infs, chiefly Mid Atl,
Garden house; NC21, Little garden house; (Qu. M21a, An
outside toilet building) Infs MD22, NC41,
87, SC39, VA33, 70, Garden house. 1971
DARE FW Addit nwMD, Garden house. 1984
Wilder You All Spoken Here 176 Sth,
Gardenhouse lilies: Day lilies. Often planted about privies. 1986
Pederson LAGS Concordance (Privy) 3 infs, nTN,
c,cwGA, Garden house; 1 inf, ceTN, Garden
house—grandmother’s term; 1 inf, cGA, Garden
house—would be a nice name for it; 1 inf, neTX,
Garden house—polite; more delicate term.
givey
adj
1 also giffy;
also sp giv(v)y; Of weather: humid, muggy, damp; by ext,
moist, pliable. [Cf EDD give v. II. 9 “Of things: to be
covered with moisture; to become moist or soft from damp or
fermentation, to ‘sweat.’ . . Hence Givey or Givy.
. . Of the ground: damp, soft, full of moisture.”] chiefly
Mid and S Atl1829
VA Lit. Museum 1.457 (OEDS), Givy, ‘muggy’. The
weather is said to be givy when there is much moisture in the
atmosphere. 1859 (1968) Bartlett Americanisms
170, Givy. A term applied to tobacco leaves, in a certain
condition of their preparation for market. 1899
(1912) Green VA Folk-Speech 197, Givey. . . Damp,
moist; “givey weather,” said of damp weather. 1915 DN
4.183 VA, Givey. . . Soft; moist:—of
earth. 1942 (1965) Parrish Slave Songs 41 GA
coast, “Giffy” . . on Sapelo means damp. 1949
AmSp 24.109 SC, Giffy [ˈgɪfɪ].
. . Damp and cold (‘Negro’). 1950 PADS
14.32 SC, Giffy [gɪfɪ]. . . Cloudy and damp,
applied to the weather. 1954 PADS 21.28 Charleston
SC, Giffy. . . Of lumber, waterlogged and unfit for use. 1965
in 1983 Johnson I Declare 52 nwFL, It’s
givvy weather. . . Cloudy, hazy, hot, clammy. Damp, but not quite
raining. Givvy weather. “Clothes won’t get hard dry” when it’s givvy
weather. . . They “give” when you take them off the line. 1967
Key Tobacco Vocab. KY, MO, Givey
weather . . moist weather which makes dry tobacco leaves
pliable. “It takes givey weather” [to strip tobacco]. 1969
DARE FW Addit NC, It’s givey and sticky.
[FW: Talking about a hot, humid day.] 1986 Pederson LAGS
Concordance , 1 inf, neGA, A givey morning—damp,
unpleasant—not always [=necessarily] cool.
2 Unsteady.1895
DN 1.371 KY, NC, TN, Givey:
unsteady. “That table’s givey.” 1926 DN
5.400 Ozarks, Givey. . . Unsteady.
“Th’ big cheer’s a-gittin’ a leetle givey lately.” 1984
Wilder You All Spoken Here 17 Sth, Givey:
Unsteady, as a just-dropped calf or a bar patron.
3 ?Yielding, not firm.1968
DARE Tape GA69, The peach that they grow.
. . it’s tough, it’s spongy, an’ it’s givey and it does look
exceptionally good in the can.
4 Generous.1963
DE Folkl. Bulletin Oct 40/2, Give-y (generous). 1970
DARE (Qu. U32, . . A very generous person) Inf VA74,
Givey.
goozle
n
1 also goozlem;
for addit varr see quots; often in combs: The throat as a whole, or
spec the gullet, windpipe, or Adam’s apple. [Varr of guzzle 1] chiefly
Sth, S Midl See Map Cf gizzle, goggle
n, google,
gorgle, gozzle n1883
(1971) Harris Nights with Remus 65 GA
[Black], He ketch a whiff er de dram, en den he see it on de side-bode,
en he step up en drap ’bout a tumbeler full some’rs down in de
neighborhoods er de goozle. 1897 (1952) McGill Narrative
261 ceSC, Do let me go. I want to cut Tillman’s d—
goozle out. 1902 DN 2.235 sIL,
Goozle [guzḷ]. . . The larynx. 1903 DN
2.315 seMO, I got up with a sore goozle this morning.
1906 DN 3.138 nwAR, Goozle,
gozzle, guzzle. . . Throat. 1908 DN
3.317 eAL, wGA, Goozle. . . The
throat, the neck. 1915 DN 4.184 swVA,
Goozle. Variant of guzzle. 1917 DN
4.412 wNC, Goozle. 1927 DN
5.474 Ozarks, Wet yer goozle oncet with this hyar
licker. 1938 Rawlings Yearling 275 nFL,
If he [=a hog] didn’t have no goozle, he couldn’t squeal. 1939
Harris Purslane 119 cNC, John told them he
had a sweet goosel where cider was concerned and couldn’t use hard
[=hard cider]. c1940 Eliason Word Lists FL
8 wFL, Goozle: The trachea or windpipe. The
term is used mostly in speaking of butchered animals. 1942
McAtee Dial. Grant Co. IN 30 (as of 1890s), Goozlem
. . gullet. 1947 True 32.104 New
Orleans LA [Black], They served real good cold beer in those
days. . . It almost froze your goozle pipes. 1954
Harder Coll. cwTN, I heard tell o’ windpipe.
We allus call it goozle. c1960 Wilson Coll.
csKY, Goozle(m). . . The neck or
throat. 1965–70 DARE (Qu. X7, Other
names for the throat: “Some food got stuck in his _____.”) 109
Infs, chiefly Sth, S Midl, Goozle; LA8,
VA73, Goozle pipe; TX86, Goozem
pipe; VA13, Goozler. c1970 Pederson
Dial. Surv. Rural GA (Throat) 1 inf, seGA,
[ˈgous̬əl]; 1 inf, seGA,
[ˈgu˅u˅zḷ, ˈgo˄uzḷ]. 1986
Pederson LAGS Concordance Gulf Region (Neck;
throat) 456 infs, (A or your, etc) goozle; 28 infs,
Goozle pipe [These resps are said by var infs to refer esp to the
Adam’s apple, windpipe, or gullet, or, less often, to the neck or
throat in general; a few infs say it is used only of animals.]; 3 infs,
Goozler; 2 infs, Gooze pipe—Adam’s apple; 1 inf, Goozling pipe; 1 inf,
Goozle bane; 1 inf, Goozle bane—lump part of throat; 1 inf, Goozle
bone—Adam’s apple, goozle vein, sugar bone; 1 inf, Goozle bone—where
you swallow; 1 inf, Goozle vein. 1987 DARE
File nwAL, Goozle [=Adam’s apple].
2 =goozlum.1960
Wentworth–Flexner Slang 224, Goozle. . . Anything
more or less of the consistency of thickened gravy.
3 A large amount. Cf goodles1966
DARE (Qu. U38b, . . “He made a _____ [of money].”)
Inf SC10, Goozle.
goozlum
n Also googlum, goozlums Cf
alamagoozlum, goozle n 2 A viscous food such
as a sauce, gravy, or pudding; see quots.1911
DN 3.544 NE, Goozlum, googlum. . .
Used of syrup, molasses, etc., at table. “Pass the goozlum for
these flapjacks.” 1916 DN 4.275 NE,
Goozlums. . . Cornstarch pudding. 1925
AmSp 1.137 Pacific NW [Logger talk], Gravy
is “goozlum.” 1950 WELS Suppl. scWI,
“Pass the goozlum” to mean “pass the gravy” or any kind of
sauce used on any kind of food. Ibid scWI, Goozlum:
a thin custard sauce for puddings or fluffs—first heard it in Arizona
about 1920. Used among miners there.
hellbender
n
1 also hellbinder:
A large aquatic salamander (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis). Also
called alligator n1 B1, devil
dog 2, ground puppy, lizard 2,
mud devil, mud puppy a, tweeg,
water dog, water puppy1812
Barton A Memoir concerning an animal of the class of reptilia, or
amphibia, which is known, in the United-States, by the names of
Alligator and Hell-bender [title]. 1842 DeKay Zool.
NY 3.89, The Allegany Hell-bender . . feeds on worms,
crayfish, fishes, and aquatic reptiles. 1893 Leland Memoirs
II.179 (DAE), That extraordinary fish lizard . . known
as the hell-bender from its extreme ugliness. 1926 TX
Folkl. Soc. Pub. 5.63, At Boiling Spring, Missouri, a negro
fisherman very gravely told my friend . . that the animal is
called “hellbender” because it is one of the creatures that inhabit the
infernal regions. 1948 Sat. Eve. Post 4 Dec
10/2 SC, It was like a gigantic hellbender. 1968
DARE Tape NC55, [FW:] What are spring
lizards? [Inf:] They’re a salamander that lives in a branch. . .
They’re black and they get about six inches long—the biggest ones.
[FW:] Is there a kind of big one . . ? [Inf:] Water dog or mud
puppy? Yeah; its real name is hellbinder [ˈhɛlbaɪndɚ]. 1979
Behler–King Audubon Field Guide Reptiles 269, Hellbender.
. . Range: Sw. New York to n. Alabama and Georgia. Separate
populations in Missouri and in Susquehanna River (New York and
Pennsylvania). 1988 DARE File cnOH
1920, We boy-scouts caught salamanders in the creeks near Akron and
called them hellbenders. They were sluggish, black, as much as a foot
long, and, though harmless, thought to be poisonous. Some called them
mud-puppies.
2 Among loggers: see
quot.1968
Adams Western Words 145, Hell bender—A logger’s
term for a log.
hell-for-leather
adv Also hell-bent for
leather [Engl dial; cf EDD (at hell sb. 1.
(9))] scattered, but esp West Cf hell-bent
for election adv phr 1
At top speed, in
great haste.1919
DN 5.76 wMA, Hell bent for leather
is the expression to which I am most used. 1939
(1973) FWP Guide MT 414, Hell-for-leather—In great
haste. “Ridin’ hell-for-leather” suggests very hard use of leather
(i.e., whip). 1939 in 1984 Lambert–Franks Voices
46 OK, Many a time I’ve seen a bunch of bandits come
riding hell-for-leather past the camp, the Regulars (the soldiers)
pounding along right behind. 1940 (1942) Clark Ox-Bow
81 NV, I saw that kid Greene, from down to Drew’s,
come by here hell-for-leather half an hour ago. 1950 WELS
(To run very fast, especially running away from something) 1
Inf, seWI, Run hell-for-leather. 1954
Forbes Rainbow 181 NEng, “He’s coming so
Hell-for-leather,” says Jude, “he may shoot right by us.” 1968
Adams Western Words 145, Hell-for-leather. 1988
DARE File, My Dad, who grew up in Idaho, uses the term
“hell-for-leather”; I was surprised when his cousin, who is from
Nebraska, said he knew it as “hell-for-election.”
honeyfuggle
v Also
honeyfackle,
honeyfugle,
honeyfogle [Perh var of Engl dial
connyfogle
v. “To hoodwink, entice by flattery” infl by
honey n; cf also
EDD gallyfuggle v. “To deceive, take in” and
honey v1]
somewhat
old-fash
1 To swindle or dupe; to
intend to cheat or trick; hence vbl n honeyfuggling. Cf bamfoozle
11829
Va. Lit. Museum 30 Dec. 458 (DAE) KY,
Honeyfuggle, to quiz, to cozen. 1848
Bartlett Americanisms 179, Honey-fogle, to swindle;
to cheat; to lay plans to deceive. 1852 Knickerbocker
40.548 FL, A neighbor . . honey-fackled
him in the matter of a heap of logs. 1858 Harper’s
New Mth. Mag. 17.270/1, “It’s all honey-fuggling”. . .
“What’s honey-fuggling?” “It’s cutting it too fat over the left.” 1931
Hench Coll. cVA, Alderman was no judge of
men. He never could tell whether a man was a gentleman or a bounder.
Anybody could honeyfogle him.
2 To flatter, sweet-talk;
to wheedle; to ballyhoo; hence n honeyfoogler a flatterer.1856
Knickerbocker 48.286 (OEDS), They go cavorting out,
honey-fuggling their consciences. 1856 U.S. Congress Congressional
Globe 34th Cong 1st Sess 22 July app 965/1 NE,
Pardon me for using the word; but Sharp “honey-fuggled”
around me. 1899 (1912) Green VA Folk-Speech
229, Honeyfuggle. . . To cajole; wheedle. 1906
DN 3.141 nwAR, Honey-fuggle. . . To
cajole, flatter. “He can’t honey-fuggle him.” 1912 NY
Eve. Jrl. 8th ed 25 Mar 12 (Zwilling Coll.), [Cartoon:]
The colonel was up on the platform honey fugling the small town boys to
beat the band. He was just starting to tell how he knocked an elephant
dead with one punch when—Crash. 1912 DN
3.578 wIN, Honey fuggle. . . To win
with sweet promises. Sometimes pronounced fugle. 1930
Shoemaker 1300 Words 28 cPA Mts (as of
c1900), Honeyfoogler—One who gets into another’s graces by
flattery. 1960 Wentworth–Flexner Slang 265,
Honeyfuggle[,] honeyfogle.
. . To flatter or cajole; esp. to flatter or cajole one’s
sweetheart . . or an attractive woman, esp. to do so to gain
sexual favor or make her forget anger or displeasure. . . Archaic.
3 with with: To
consort with, “snuggle up to.”1887
Courier–Jrl. (Louisville KY) 7 May 4/4, The modern practices
in politics of . . temporizing with cranks, demagogues and
tricksters instead of sending them to the rear; and of honey-fuggling
with rascals instead of hitting them a death-blow between the eyes. 1898
Harte Stories in Light 191, Honeyfogling with a horse-thief,
eh?
4 To lure, entice.1888
Century Illustr. Mag. 36.81/2 IL, He acts
like a man that ’s got a deadfall all sot, un is a-tryin’ to
honey-fugle the varmint to git ’im to come underneath. 1894
DN 1.331 NJ, Honey-fogle: to
allure by traps. 1902 Harben Abner Daniel
157 (DAE), He’s been tryin’ to honeyfuggle the old man into a
trade, but I don’t think he made a deal with ’im.
5 also honeyfuddle:
To show affection in public.1969–70
DARE (Qu. AA8, When people make too much of a show of
affection in a public place . . “There they were at the church
supper _____[with each other].”) Inf GA77,
Honeyfugglin’—old-fashioned; WV16, Honeyfuddling.
hookem-snivey
adj Also sp hookum-snivy [OEDS
hookum-snivey “dial. and slang. . . deceitful,
tricky”] old-fash Petty; deceitful,
sneaky.1938
Atlantic Mth. 161.632/2, I asked a Dutchman . . whether
their jobholders ever cut up any such hookem-snivey capers with public
money as ours do. He replied no, . . if a jobholder tried to get
away with any pawky bookkeeping, he would be likely to hear about it. 1939
AmSp 14.22 (as of 1890s), [Letter:] Are you acquainted with
the extraordinary word hookumsnivy, signifying “mean” or
“small”? My Quaker grandmother, born in Maryland in 1823, used it in my
hearing when she was about seventy years old. She said that it was a
barbarism in use among common people and that we must forget it.
hook
Jack v phr NEng,
esp MA =hook
school.1877
Bartlett Americanisms 294, Hook Jack. To play
truant. New England. 1892 DN 1.212 NEng,
I was familiar in my boyhood with the expressions to play hookey
and hook Jack. Ibid 216 Boston MA
(as of 1840–50), I was born and brought up on Fort Hill, Boston
. . and in all the period from 1840–1850 the current phrase among
the boys was to hook Jack. 1913 Boston
Herald (MA) 20 May 10/5 ceMA (as of 1860s), “Playing
Hookey,” Etc. . . When I was a boy in Chelsea in the late
sixties, we used to say, “Hook Jack,” but before that in Eastport, Me.,
we used to say, “Sky Jack.” 1949 Kurath Word
Geog. 23, The Plymouth–Cape Cod area has preserved rather few
unique expressions, among them . . hooked Jack . . for
‘played hookey’. Ibid fig 158 (Played Truant) 6
infs, Boston and eMA, Hooked Jack. 1967–68
DARE (Qu. JJ6, To stay away from school without an excuse)
Inf MA33, Hook Jack; my kids say “skip school”.
hooky
bob v phr, hence freq vbl
n hooky bobbing, also hooky bobbins Also sp
hookey bob chiefly NW Cf bum-riding
To hold onto a
moving vehicle so as to be towed along over snow or ice.1965
Bowen Alaskan Dict. (Tabbert Alaskan Engl.) 18, Hookey
Bob. . . To hook rides on the back of moving vehicles and
slither along the ice road on the soles of one’s boots. 1967
DARE (Qu. EE24b, When children go down hill on a sled)
Inf OR10, Hooky bobbin’—when you attach sled to car;
(Qu. EE26, . . Games . . children play in the snow)
Inf MA71, Hooking rides; WA22,
Hooky bobbing—hold on to fender of car, slide, squatting with shoes
sliding. 1968–87 DARE File ID,
Hooky bobbing—after a snow when the streets still had snow on
them, we used to hook on bumpers of cars or trucks and squat down for a
ride. The trick of this was to stay on for a block or so without being
caught. It was more exciting when the car swerved; Ibid,
Hanging on the back of a vehicle and being pulled along on the surface
of ice or snow; Ibid (as of 1964), My college roommate, an
Idaho native, told of “hooky bobbing” in Twin Falls, Idaho. Kids would
grab on to the bumper of a car and be pulled along on the snow on their
feet; Ibid cnUT, sID, Hooky bobbing—hanging
on the back bumper of a car and skiing on one’s shoes on slippery
pavement; Ibid seWA, Growing up in Pullman
[WA] . . we referred to hanging on to back bumpers of cars moving
on snow/ice as “hooky bobbing”. 1974 in 1981 Tabbert Alaskan Engl. , [Newspaper article:] “Hooky
bobbing,” which occurs when a child grabs hold of the rear bumper of a
car to slide along behind it, is very dangerous. 1983
DARE File ID ( . . Games children
play in the snow) Hooky bobbins.
hopping
John n
1 also happy Jack, happy
John, hop-in-John: A dish usu composed of black-eyed
peas, rice, and side meat, eaten esp on New Year’s Day for
good luck; see quots. chiefly S Atl, esp SC, GA See Map1838
(1852) Gilman S. Matron 124 seSC, Before me
. . was an immense field of hopping John [Footnote:
Bacon and rice]; a good dish, to be sure. 1885 in
1976 Rose Doc. Hist. Slavery 397 SC, Among
the many desirable things our parents brought us, the most delightful
was cow pease, rice, and a piece of bacon, cooked together; the mixture
was called by the slaves, “Hopping John.” 1938 FWP Ocean
Highway xxviii SC, Hop-In-John: cow
peas, rice, and bacon boiled together. 1950 PADS
14.38 SC, [Footnote:] Hoppin’ John is probably on
most tables in S.C. on New Year’s Day. This with collard greens is
supposed to bring the family plenty of greenbacks and loose change
throughout the year. It is believed that one is tempting fate if one
fails to have hoppin’ John on the table New Year’s Day. 1962
Hench Coll. VA, [Letter:] The conversation
we had over the “hoppinjohn” New Year’s Day is still remembered. 1965–70
DARE (Qu. H50, Dishes made with . . peas) 14
Infs, chiefly S Atl, Hoppin(g) John—(black-eyed) peas
and rice; DC12, GA24, MA122,
SC9, Hopping John; GA67, Hopping
John—old-fashioned; GA55, Hopping John—rice with
peas; country term, old-fashioned; NJ67, Hopping
John—rice and peas, from West Indies; SC22, Hopping
John—rice and field peas or cow peas; FL19, Hopping
John—peas cooked with rice and salt pork; GA12,
Hopping John—field peas and side meat; GA79, Hopping
John—black-eyed peas, rice, bacon; SC62, Hopping
John—(red) peas and rice cooked together with small bits of meat; SC4,
11, 21, 46, 70, Hopping John—(peas and rice)—always eaten on New Year’s
Day (for luck); GA3, Hopping Johns [sic]—black-eyed
peas; NC51, Hopping John—on the South Carolina border
more than here; SC32, Hopping John—corn, peas, rice
[FW sugg]; TX65, Hopping John—southern Texas word,
grits and black-eyed peas eaten together; GA70,
Hoppin’ John—mix peas with dried fruits; SC19,
Hoppin’ John—cow peas cooked with rice—it’s more softer than more
harder; TX29, Hoppin’ John—rice and black-eyed peas,
for New Year’s Day; SC7, Happy Jack—peas and rice;
Happy John—peas and grits; (Qu. H45, Dishes made with meat)
Inf GA15, Hopping John—peas, rice and fat meat
(pork). 1988 Lincoln Avenue 196 wNC
(as of c1940) [Black], I’d heap rather have a bellyful of . .
cornpone an’ hoppin’ John.
2 Transf: a cowpea.1966
DARE (Qu. I20, . . Kinds of beans) Inf SC21,
Cowpeas—brownish looking—the pea itself is called hopping John.
3 A grasshopper 1.1970
DARE (Qu. R6, . . Names . . for grasshoppers)
Inf PA247, Hopping Johns.
hosey
v, n |ˈho(u)zɪ| Also sp hoz(e)y [Etym
uncert; perh < holds + hypocoristic -ie suff3, but cf quot
1941] MA, ME Cf boney To stake a claim or
reserve a right to (something); to choose; the claim so made.1927
AmSp 3.169 NYC, Children still stand before
toyshop windows and call out, “I hozey the drum,” . . meaning, “I
choose for mine.” 1941 AN&Q 2.120/2 eMA,
The child’s word “hosey” (“hozey” or “hozy”) . . has persisted in
some parts of the country for more than fifty years, transmitted
orally, without “literary” recognition. It is used in the sense of
“demand,” “claim,” “choose”—as in “I hosey such-and-such an object.”
The child who gets the phrase out first claims and receives the thing
in question. . . It was in use in and around Boston half a century
ago, and is still current in New England. Ibid 153/2,
Children use . . [“hosey”] . . [for expressions] of the “I
stake my claim” idea . . since no word familiar to children seems
to express the idea adequately. 1950 WELS Suppl.
Boston MA, Hozy [ˈhouzɪ]. “I hozy all these”—said
with a gesture of both arms including the things referred to. This is
an expression used by a child when claiming the right to an imaginary
possession, as of things seen in a shop window, along the road, etc. 1967
DARE (Qu. V5b, If you take something that nobody seems to
own, you might say, “Before anybody else gets it, I’m going to
_____this.”) Inf MA2, I hosey [ˈhozi] it. 1971
Today Show Letters ceMA, Another
Bostonianism which I have had to put up with over the years is the
expression “I hosey (pronounced ‘hoe-zee’) that” chair or what have
you. This means “I’ve reserved that,” “I’ve got first shot at that,”
“that’s mine.” 1975 Gould ME Lingo 136, Hosey—To
claim something up for grabs. When Father starts to carve the turkey,
one child may cry, “I hosey the wishbone!” Mainers generally recognize
that the first to cry hoseys has established a claim. 1986
DARE File Boston MA, “I hosey that seat”
[means] lay a claim to. Common especially in eastern Massachusetts, but
elsewhere in the state too. 1988 DARE File Boston
MA (as of c1920), “I hosey the nibby [=the heel of a loaf of
bread]” was very often heard. . . [Hosey] applied to
other situations as in “I hosey last pick—first extra” when it seemed
likely that extra desserts might appear!
izzard
n Also sp izard The letter z—used
in var fig phrr, as:a A
and izzard: The beginning
and end, the epitome of (something). 1835
Nicklin Virginia Springs 19 (DAE), That celebrated
spot which is . . the Ay and Izzard of a tour to the Virginia
Springs. b from
A to izzard: From beginning to end; thoroughly; in every detail.[1839
(1969) Briggs Advent. Franco 1.4 eNY,
She read the
dictionary through from A to izzard.]
1888 Harper New
Mth. Mag. 76.783 eKS, [He] knows “from a to
izzard” every detail of a soldier's needs. 1899