scribbles tagged ‘euphemisms’

graveyard punctuation

Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007 | tags: , , , ,  |

Innocently wandering through a Dungeness, not Dungeness, graveyard.   As one is wont to do.

Minding my own business.  Reading the odd,   very odd, gravestone.   When,

SUDDENLY

As if from nowhere,   a cryptic cat launched itself at my torso.    It cunningly used pin-prick  claws to latch onto my skinny left thigh.   While chewing my zipper and partially succeeding in mesmerizing me with talking eyes the  killer kitty eye’d my nose as a potential source of protien:

Scared, me?   Oh yes.

Lot’s of ‘nice kitty’s were administered to secure my thigh’s freedom.

Finally I discovered that offering my fingers as a sacrifice helped lure the kitty’s claws from my leg as it performed the twistiest of jumps in a digit devouring  frenzy.   My fingers and legs bare punctuation scars…

I’ve not heard an American use the phrase ‘graveyard’ nor seen sign’s with the phrase.   Roads are called ‘cemetary road’ and sign’s indicate cemetaries.    Modern cemetaries  are often labelled  ’memorial garden’.   The mutliple, relevant,  related meanings  that come with using the word  ’grave‘ appeal to me:

  1. dig; excavate.
  2. carve or shape with a chisel: sculpture; carve or cut (as letters or figures) into a hard surface: engrave.
  3. to impress or fix (as a thought) deeply.
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what do the pyjammas say?

Tuesday, December 26th, 2006 | tags: , , ,  |

There is a trend amongst the young adult girls of Seattle.    I’ve not noticed boys indulging in this fluffy passtime.   The trend is wearing your pyjamma pants  as everyday wear.   What does this dressing choice say?

Possibly it’s a variation on the notion of ‘come to bed eyes’,   ‘come to bed pants’?   Maybe it’s a way of expressing how ‘laid back’ you are “I’m so laid back I didn’t even bother getting dressed this morning“.   Could it be that these girl’s objected to the  storyline of ‘Sleepless in Seattle’ and they’re making a point about the fashion industry,   they’re awake in Seattle and not following the store-based clothing classifications.   A wee rebellion against the fashion industry.    Hoorah!  

Here’s a couple of girls sporting the look in a local Coffee House:

 

 

The folded arms, ankles-crossed, pony-tails,  multiple uncoordinated colours,  jacket shorter than t-shirt and trainers (US = sneakers) are all optional extra’s but definitely part of the core ‘look’ I see the local girls stylin’ in.   I may have to try this out to get the full  experience of the fashion-rebellious pyjamma’s as outer-wear thing. Like wearing other people’s clothes,  but not quite since I will have to purchase my own Hello Kitty Pyjamma pants.  

I’ll report back on the experience.   Wish me luck :-)

1 wonderful musing »

broken oven

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006 | tags: ,  |

fifteenth post in  a Wednesday series  touching on the poignant  physical mysteries of “why wendy’s single“.    

Reason # 15:  broken oven

I wont be baking my own.  

2 bits of fabulous banter »

irregular

Monday, October 16th, 2006 | tags: ,  |

Even Wikipedia cites this euphemism to describe constipation.    The packaging on US shop sold products is phrased in terms of obtaining regularity.   No mention of softening stools,  relieving cramps, or other symptoms associated with constipation.  

I’ve always been a bit of a regular softy :-)

what do you think of that »

bio break

Thursday, September 14th, 2006 | tags: ,  |

I just need to take a bio break

Will the USA euphemisms for ‘go to the TOILET‘ never cease?   I have to admire their perpetual creativity.   Maybe it’s the new frontier,   lavatory linguistics?   Now they can no longer literally ‘go west’ they ‘go to the rest rooms’ and invent brave new words for the experience to baffle the foriegners.   Splendid,   I’ll play,   after a quick ‘de-hydration squirt’

1 wonderful musing »

a little something for the weekend?

Saturday, September 9th, 2006 | tags: , ,  |

The BBC debunks barbering.   The full article is worth reading. Here I’ve pulled extracts that  provide an insight into why Christian Ohio male  teachers might be considered of ill repute if they attended a barber:

Hair, it seems, had been a very important social and religious issue throughout all of the history of mankind, especially since many ancient superstitions revolved around it…     …In 1308, the world’s oldest barber organisation, still known in London as the “Worshipful Company of Barbers” was founded…     …By the end of the 18th century, most barbers had given up their rights to perform surgery, except in small towns where surgeons were not available. They lost their status and became labourers, fashioning wigs in the 18th and 19th century, and their shops became shady hangouts…     …the art of barbering was revived in 1893 when A. B. Moler established a school for barbers in Chicago. Several years before, in 1886, the Barbers’ Protective Union had been founded in Columbus, Ohio, which eventually became Journeymen Barber’s International on December 5, 1887. In 1897, the State of Minnesota passed the legislation for a barber licence.

In the 1970′s the English barber shops were still supplying their customers with  ”A little something for the weekend“.   Their exclussively male clients could avoid the embarressment of going into a chemist* to ask  for ‘french letters’ over the counter where the shop assisstant might be  neither male nor discrete and other customers may overhear the request.   That’s very embaressing.   Barbers are discrete and approving of your opportunity to use the french letters.   How do I know this?   Let’s just say ‘word of mouth’   ;-)

 

* Chemist (UK) = Drugstore (US)

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religious experience

Thursday, July 20th, 2006 | tags: , ,  |

US people ‘rest in a room’.    It sounds meditative,  contemplative,  possibly even spiritual.    

When tour de france cyclists take a forced break they “commune with nature“.   This sounds even more spiritual than ‘resting’.

I tend to use the loo to have a pee or take a dump.   It is probably a strikingly similar experience without the spiritually inspiring label.     Maybe  I need to put some religous symbols in my loo rest rooms to help local visitors  feel rested.

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smells like plastic

Monday, July 10th, 2006 | tags: ,  |

A sticker on the underside of my shoe says:

Synthetic upper.  Man made sole.

Woman made upper?  Machine-made upper?  Synthetic sole?   The sole looks like machine moulded plastic rather than ‘hand’ made by people.  It all smells like plastic to me.  I wonder why the sticker doesn’t say something like

plastic

or, to be more specific:

made by people and machines from  plastic

what do you think of that »

super excited

Friday, June 30th, 2006 | tags: ,  |

occassionally the ‘executives’ send emails to the coal-face.   93.14159 % of them start with the phrase “I’m super excited…”      Apparently they get super excited about sweeping generalisations,  nothing specific.     These make me think of labrador puppies before they’ve been house trained.   Not inspring confidence in the executives ability to put a finger on the pulse of the organisation.   Do US people thrive on this sort of vague praise?

To me ‘Super excited’ is beginning to mean ‘here comes the motivational management bull****. Skip down two or three  paragraphs to avoid having your intelligence insulted and actually find out what this email is really about’  

what do you think of that »

feminine hygiene isle

Thursday, June 22nd, 2006 | tags: , ,  |

Sanitary protection (UK) isle

Both euphemisms  refer to the social value of ‘cleanliness’ something that traditionally groups with lower social standing own – the cleaning.   The US euphemisim clearly cites this as a female issue.   Women,   cleaning,   clearly acceptable terms to put together.   The name Jenn overheard a female using refers to females in a respectful way  without raising  cleaniliness or anything  that might disturb people who don’t bleed (blood?):   Lady pants.   I suspect lady pants will never catch on as a euphamism because it has too few syllables per word to be sufficiently pretentious for a modern euphamism (e.g. used = previously owned).   Lets  play with  the experience to find a new euphemism.  

This isn’t a hygeine issue because  the blood is fresh.   I don’t like the inference that I have a hygiene problem because I’m  a girl.  Bad marketting.   We could  ’balance’ the names by also having a ‘male hygeine’  isle.   The male  hygiene isle would  contain products for cleaning  spatter from around the toilet (rest room), removing  sperm ejaculated while asleep (wet dreams) with quick sheet drying abilities,   and other  messy stuff  that is male-body-function-specific.    Some wonderful product-euphamisms possible here,   for example,  dry dream wipes.   Rather than add another  set of gender specific hygeine problems to be solved,   lets cut the word hygeine.

This is  a blood-flow management issue.   Management is a much better word more taking control and sorting things out.   To avoid the monosyllabic word blood lets pair management with the technical term – Menstruation.   Ideal.    Lots of syllables,   unintelligible, unpronouncable to the uninitiated (children),   and it start’s with an M.

Menstruation Management isle

They could stock this supermarket isle with pain killers,   stress relief products,  chocolate,  action/violence  DVDs  and bandages for anyone who said the wrong thing to the Menstruator.   With a name like feminine hygeine  the products  do not  sit naturally with the other products that a menstruator might impulse purchase at the same time.   In the US feminine hygeine products are often placed by nappies.   How whacky is that?   It says to me,   this is your place:   clean the messes, have babies and clean their messes.    Not an embodiment of the progressive attitude I’d expect to encounter in North America.   I’m not going to impulse buy some baby pants when I’m suffering from pre-menstrual tension/syndrome.   Shops are missing out on a key marketting opportunity by implying  menstruating women have a  hygiene problem,   not mechandising to leverage female financial independence,  and  offending people like me by forcing me to walk by  baby pants.      

1 wonderful musing »

casual smart

Wednesday, June 21st, 2006 | tags: ,  |

khaki cargo pants & t-shirts

Originally uploaded by :: Wendy ::.

 

 

Wendy: dress in clothes your mother would think you look good in. Casual with a hint of smart because you are representing the company to these customers.

male colleague: Khaki’s and logo’d t-shirt Ok?

Wendy: a popular choice!

1 wonderful musing »

attention span challenged?

Wednesday, May 3rd, 2006 | tags: ,  |

fascinated by the evolution of euphemisms?   This book could be good for you,   it was for me:

when will jesus bring the pork chops?     George Carlin

It’s proudly sitting in my Loo to hold the attention of people taking a  short ‘rest’.   It’s not due to escape soon.

what do you think of that »

naughty word: TOILET

Thursday, March 9th, 2006 | tags: ,  |

US people appear to avoid using this word.   When in restaurants they use the phrase  ’Rest rooms’.   Descriptions of homes for sale may include 1.5 ‘bathrooms’.   The 0.5 bathroom is one without a bath (uh?!) or a shower.   It appears to mean a room with  a sink and a toilet.   Even toilet paper is labeled ‘Bathroom’ tissue.  

Bathroom Tissue

‘toilet humour’ exists in the US.   I’m not sure if it is known or referred to by this category.    

TOILET TOILET TOILET!

That felt good,   that felt NAUGHTY.   Teee heeee…

4 bits of fabulous banter »