The Wonder of Whiffling

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The Wonder of Whiffling Page 9

by Adam Jacot De Boinod


  strobe-light honey (US black teen slang) a woman who seems attractive in flickering light but not otherwise

  ZEPPELINS

  One aspect in particular often receives close attention:

  bathycolpian (1825) having a deep cleavage

  headlamps (UK slang early 20C) female breasts: this was when large, raised car headlights were the norm (a century earlier the common expression was barges)

  dead heat in a Zeppelin race (UK slang) an admiring description of large breasts

  fore-buttocks (Pope: The Dunciad 1727) breasts

  Cupid’s kettledrums (18C) breasts

  SUPERSIZE ME

  So how do you get your feelings across? Do fries go with that shake? was a phrase called out by black men in 1970s America to a passing woman they fancied; while the object of admiration might mutter to her friend: He can put his shoes under my bed anytime…

  boombaloomba (Australian slang) an expression of a man’s attraction to a woman

  look that needs suspenders (1940s) a very interested glance at a woman (the suspenders were needed to keep the man’s eyeballs attached to their sockets)

  HUNTER DITHERERS

  Not that everyone finds it easy to be so forward:

  stick-up (Wiltshire) to make the first tentative advances towards courting

  dangle (late 18C) to follow a woman without actually addressing her

  quirkyalone (US slang 1999) someone who just wants the right person to come along at the right time even if that means waiting

  FAINT HEART

  Sometimes one just has to take the risk and get a bit proactive:

  tapper (1950s) a boy who repeatedly pestered a girl for a date

  wingwoman (US slang from the film Top Gun 1986) a professional female matchmaker who escorts a man to a bar or club, engages in light conversation to draw in other females, and then withdraws

  strike breaker (1920s) a young woman who was ready to date her friend’s beau when a couple’s romance was coming to an end

  rabbit’s-kiss (Anglo-Manx) a penalty in the game of ‘forfeits’ in which a man and woman have each to nibble the same piece of straw until their lips meet

  DELIGHTFUL

  Until 1958 debutantes and their mothers exchanged information about the respectable young men to whom they were introduced by using a special code:

  FU Financially Unsound

  MTF Must Touch Flesh

  MSC Makes Skin Crawl

  NSIT Not Safe In Taxis

  VVSITPQ Very, Very Safe In Taxis, Probably Queer

  THE WILDER SHORES OF LOVE

  As homosexuality was illegal in the UK until 1967, the secret language of Polari was used to disguise gay subculture from the disapproving gaze of the law. It was originally used by circus and fairground performers who were equally keen to communicate with each other without their audience understanding. Drawn from Italian, Yiddish, Cockney rhyming slang and full of backwards words (such as ecaf for face) Polari provided various terms that we all use today, such as drag, camp and bimbo, as well as some less well-known but equally colourful expressions:

  omi-polone a gay man (literally man-woman; a lesbian was polone-omi, a woman-man)

  alamo hot for him

  basket the bulge of male genitals through trousers

  naff awful, dull, bad (said to stand for Not Available For F***ing)

  CHEAP DATE

  Whatever your proclivities, there are numerous reasons why one should beware of giving too much too soon:

  couch cootie (US 1920s) a poor or miserly man who prefers to court a woman in her own house than take her out on the town

  flat-wheeler (US college slang 1920s) a young man whose idea of entertaining a girl is to take her for a walk

  cream-pot love (b.1811) professed by insincere young men to dairymaids, to get cream and other goods from them

  GETTING DOWN TO IT

  In the less permissive 1950s, a Nottingham goodnight was the phrase used of a courting couple who had got back from their date, and then slammed the door and said ‘goodnight’ loudly before retiring quietly to the sofa, hoping they would not be disturbed for some time…

  suaviation (1656) a love kiss

  cow-kissing (US slang mid 19C) kissing with much movement of the tongues and lips

  lallygagger (1920s) a courting male who liked to kiss his sweetheart in hallways

  bundling (b.1811) a man and a woman sleeping in the same bed, he with his clothes on, and she with her petticoat on

  COUNTRY LOVING

  But if the weather’s good, why bother to go home at all?

  sproag (Scotland late 16C) to run among the haystacks after the girls at night

  to give a girl a green gown (late 16C) to tumble her onto the grass

  bunting time (1699) when the grass is high enough to hide young men and maids courting

  boondock (Tennessee campus slang b.1950) to neck, pet or make love in an automobile

  gulch (Newfoundland 1895) to frequent a sheltered hollow to engage in sexual intimacy

  SEALED WITH A LOVING KISS – LOVE LETTER ACRONYMS

  During the Second World War all mail was opened and read by the official Censor. So acronyms of places written on the backs of envelopes were used to convey secret messages of love (and lust) between servicemen and their wives or girlfriends:

  HOLLAND Hope Our Love Lasts And Never Dies

  MEXICO CITY May Every Kiss I Can Offer Carry Itself To You

  MALAYA My Ardent Lips Await Your Arrival

  CHINA Come Home I Need Affection

  NORWICH (K)nickers Off Ready When I Come Home

  BURMA Be Undressed Ready My Angel

  EGYPT Eager to Grab Your Pretty Tits

  SIAM Sexual Intercourse At Midnight

  ALL LOVED UP

  Limerence (US Connecticut 1977) is the word for that initial exhilarating rush of falling in love, the state of ‘being in love’. During that time the besotted of either sex should be careful not to deff out, the American slang for women who immediately lose contact with their female friends after acquiring a steady boyfriend. And this is just one of the pitfalls of sudden love:

  fribbler (1712) one who professes rapture for a woman, but dreads her consent

  batmobiling (US slang) putting up protective emotional shields just as a relationship enters an intimate, vulnerable stage (with reference to the car’s retracting armour)

  THEY FLEE FROM ME

  Once things start to go wrong, the slide can be all too rapid…

  to wear the willow (late 16C) to have been abandoned by one’s lover

  … so do try and avoid being cynical…

  sorbet sex (US slang popularized by Sex and the City) a casual sexual relationship undertaken in the period between two more serious relationships

  pull a train (US slang 1965) sexual intercourse with a succession of partners (like a string of boxcars, they have to be coupled and uncoupled)

  … or sentimental…

  desiderium (Swift: letter to Pope 1715) a yearning for a thing one once had but has lost

  anacampserote (1611) a herb that can bring back departed love

  DROIT DE SEIGNEUR

  Take heart from the fact that anything goes; and the history of love tells of some decidedly odd arrangements:

  gugusse (early 1880s) an effeminate youth who frequents the private company of priests

  panmixis (1889) a population in which random mating takes place

  Shunamitism (b.1901) the practice of an old man sleeping with, but not necessarily having sex with, a young woman to preserve his youth (the rationale was that the heat of the young woman would transfer to the old man and revitalize him, based on the Biblical story of King David and Abishag)

  HE DOESN’T UNDERSTAND ME

  Just beware the types for whom lovemaking has become habitual (or even professional):

  mud-honey (Tennyson: Maud 1855) the dirty pleasures of men about town

  cougar (Canadian slang 2005) an old
er woman on the prowl, preferably for a younger man

  lovertine (1603) someone addicted to sex

  play checkers (US gay jargon 1960s) to move from seat to seat in a cinema in search of a receptive sex partner

  twopenny upright (UK slang 1958) the charge made by a prostitute for an act of sexual intercourse standing up out of doors

  WORD JOURNEYS

  boudoir (French 18C) a place to sulk or pout in

  friend (Old English) a lover; then (12C) a relative or kinsman

  buxom (12C) obedient, compliant; then (16C) plump and comely

  harem (17C from Turkish via Arabic) forbidden to others; then sacred to the women and their apartments

  WITTOLS AND BEER BABIES

  Marriage and family life

  Marriage halves our griefs,

  doubles our joys,

  and quadruples our expenses

  (1902–4)

  However giddy and capricious at first, it’s certainly true that Love moves, inexorably, towards the recognized and the formalized:

  wooer-bab (Burns: Halloween 1785) a garter tied below the knee of a young man as a sign that he was about to make an offer of marriage

  subarrhation (Swinburne: Spousals 1686) a betrothal accomplished by the man’s showering presents on his incipient bride

  acquaintance (Shropshire) a fiancé/e

  maiden-rent (17C) a fee paid by every tenant in the Welsh manor of Builth at their marriage (given to the lord for his omitting the ancient custom of marcheta, whereby he spent the first night with his tenant’s new wife)

  gluepot (b.1811) a parson (from joining men and women together in matrimony)

  IN THE PAPERS

  In the UK, people of a certain class have traditionally advertised marriage, just as they do births and deaths, with an announcement in their newspaper of choice. This trio defining a person’s life is colloquially known as hatched, matched and dispatched (with some believing that these really are the only times your name should appear in the papers). In Australia, similar announcements are known as yells, bells and knells. But though established through long custom, marriage has come in many varied and interesting forms…

  paranymph (1660) the best man or bridesmaid at a wedding

  levirate (1725) the custom requiring a man to marry his brother’s widow

  punalua (1889) a group marriage in which wives’ sisters and husbands’ brothers were considered spouses

  adelphogamy (1926) a form of marriage in which brothers share a wife or wives

  jockum-gagger (1797) a man living on the prostitution of his wife

  bitch’s blind (US slang) a wife who acts as a cover for a homosexual male

  opsigamy (1824) marrying late in life

  VIRAGO

  Maritality (1812) is a charming word, meaning ‘the excessive affection a wife feels for her husband’, while levament (1623) describes one of the best aspects of a good marriage, ‘the comfort a man has from his wife’. But in general the words and phrases our language has thrown up speak of more demanding realities, with wives all too often in the frame:

  loudspeaker (underworld slang 1933) a wife

  alarm clock (US slang 1920s) a nagging woman

  tenant at will (late 18C) one whose wife arrives at the alehouse to make him come home

  ten commandments (mid 15C) the ten fingers and thumbs especially of a wife

  curtain-lecture (b.1811) a reproof given by a wife to her husband in bed

  cainsham smoke (1694) the tears of a man who is beaten by his wife (deriving from a lost story relating to Keynsham, near Bristol)

  AFTERPLAY

  Love and marriage, the song goes, go together ‘like horse and carriage’. So why doesn’t fidelity always fit so easily into the equation?

  wittol (15C) a man who is aware of his wife’s unfaithfulness but doesn’t mind or acquiesces

  court of assistants (late 18C) the young men with whom young wives, unhappy in their marriages to older men, are likely to seek solace

  to pick a needle without an eye (West Indian) of a young woman, to give oneself in marriage to a man whom one knows will be of no use as a sexual partner

  gandermooner (1617) a husband who strays each month, during the time of the month when his wife is ‘unavailable’

  stumble at the truckle-bed (mid 17C) to ‘mistake’ the maid’s bed for one’s wife’s

  UP THE DUFF

  The desire to expand the family is all too natural; though the actual circumstances of conception may vary considerably:

  beer babies (Sussex) babies sired when the man was drunk

  Band-Aid baby (UK slang) a child conceived to strengthen a faltering relationship

  basting (UK slang 2007) being with a gay male friend who offers to give the baby a woman longs for

  sooterkin (1658) an imaginary kind of birth attributed to Dutch women from sitting over their stoves

  THE STORK DESCENDS

  In parts of America they say you have swallowed a watermelon seed when you become pregnant. In Britain, children were once told that the new baby boy in the family had been found under the gooseberry bush, while the girl was found in the parsley bed:

  omphalomancy (1652) divination by counting the knots in the umbilical cord of her first born to predict the number of children a mother will have

  nom de womb (US slang 2005) a name used by an expectant parent to refer to their unborn child

  infanticipate (US 1934) to be expecting a child

  quob (b.1828) to move as the embryo does in the womb; as the heart does when throbbing

  pigeon pair (Wiltshire dialect) a boy and a girl (when a mother has only two children)

  PRIVATE VIEWS

  As soon as Baby appears, of course, there is much excitement. Relatives and friends crowd round to check out the new arrival, and any gossip about the timing of the pregnancy melts away:

  barley-child (Shropshire) a child born in wedlock, but which makes its advent within six months of marriage (alluding to the time which elapses between barley sowing and barley harvest)

  jonkin (Yorkshire) a tea-party given to celebrate a birth of a child

  crying-cheese (Scotland) a ritual where cheese was given to neighbours and visitors when a child was born

  FIRST STEPS

  Then there is the long, slow process of bringing up the little darling; beset with many dangers, but not, fortunately, as many as in the past…

  vagitus (Latin 17C) a new-born child’s cry

  marriage music (late 17C) the crying of children

  blow-blow (Jamaican English 1955) babbling baby-talk

  chrisom (c.1200) a child that dies within a month of its birth (so called from the chrisom-cloth, anointed with holy unguent, which the children wore until they were christened)

  quiddle (Midlands) to suck a thumb

  gangrel (1768) a child just beginning to walk

  dade (Shropshire) to lead children when learning to walk

  CHIPS OFF THE OLD BLOCK

  It’s an exhausting time, but hopefully rewarding, whatever the extra commitments:

  antipelargy (1656) the love of children for their parents

  philostorgy (1623) natural affection, such as that between parents and children

  butter-print (Tudor–Stuart) a child bearing the stamp of its parents’ likeness

  stand pad (Cockney) to beg in crowded streets with a written statement round one’s neck, such as ‘wife and five kids to support’

  sandwich generation (Canadian slang) those caring for young children and elderly parents at the same time (usually ‘baby boomers’ in their 40s or 50s)

  POPPING OFF

  Sadly, not all men seem able to stay the course:

  zoo daddy (US slang) a divorced father who rarely sees his child or children (he takes his kids to the zoo when exercising his visiting rights)

  baby fathers (Jamaican English 1932) males who abandon their partner and offspring

  goose father (US slang 2005) a father wh
o lives alone having sent his spouse and children to a foreign country to learn English or do some other form of advanced study

  jacket (Jamaican English 2007) a man tested and proven not to be the father of the children said to be his

  EARLY PROMISE

  And what a course it can prove to be…

  glaikut (Aberdeenshire) of a child too fond of its mother and refusing to be parted from her at any time

  chippie-burdie (Scotland) a promise made to a child to pacify them

  killcrop (1652) a child who is perpetually hungry

  vuddle (Hampshire and Wiltshire) to spoil a child by injudicious petting

  ankle-sucker (Worcestershire) a child or person dependent on others

  COLTISH

  Not necessarily made any easier as the offspring grow older…

  dandiprat (1583) an urchin

  daddle (Suffolk) to walk like a young child trying to copy its father

  liggle (East Anglian) to carry something too heavy to be carried easily (e.g. of a child with a puppy)

  airling (1611) a person who is both young and thoughtless

  … though getting them outside in the fresh air is always a good plan…

  grush (Hiberno-English) of children, to scramble for coins and other small gifts thrown at them

  duck’s dive (Newfoundland) a boy’s pastime of throwing a stone into the water without making a splash

  poppinoddles (Cumberland 1885) a boyish term for a somersault

 

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