DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

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Stanley
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

Here's a funny word.... 'FRAUGHT'
So I looked it up....
late Middle English, ‘laden, equipped’, past participle of obsolete fraught ‘load with cargo’, from Middle Dutch vrachten, from vracht ‘ship's cargo’. Compare with freight.
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Tizer »

Cathy has posted a joke with the words `trap doors'. The word trap is also used by geologists to refer to massive, solidified lava flows which have occurred repeatedly in the same place over long time periods. It results in a stepped rock formation and was first named by Swedish geologist whose word for stairs is `trapp'. One of the biggest formations is the Deccan Traps in India. Wikipedia
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

I've heard the term referring to the rock formation but never knew the origin. Thanks Peter.....
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

'TARRY' attracted me so I went for a furtle....
The verb "to tarry" means to delay or linger, originating from Middle English tarien and terien, which meant "to vex, harass, cause to hesitate, delay". These Middle English words likely came from Old English tirian, tirgan, or tergan ("to worry, provoke") and ultimately trace back to the Proto-Germanic "terganą" or "targijaną" ("to pull, tease, irritate") and the Proto-Indo-European "derHgʰ-" root. The adjective "tarry" means "consisting of or like tar" and comes from the noun "tar" plus the suffix "-y"
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Cathy »

That was a tricky one to read, a bit of a tongue twister 😊
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

I think they are struggling a bit with the origin Cathy. It all seems a bit tenuous to me.... :laugh5:
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Tripps »

Knee jerk instant reaction, takes me to one of Aunty Josie's poems. :smile:

“To bed! To bed!”
Says Sleepy-head;
Tarry awhile,” says Slow;
“Put on the pan,”
Says Greedy Nan*;
“We’ll sup before we go.”

Could the word be connected in some way with the French 'tard' meaning late? It's as credible as the "proto Germanic".
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

I think you have a much more plausible shot at the origin David. The thing that triggered me was the song 'Let him go, let him tarry let him sink or let him swim....' and when I was furtling I was surprised to find that it is an Irish folk song.
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Cathy »

Heard a new word today - Flocculate - on a cooking show.
.
In cooking, to Flocculate is to cause small suspended particles in a liquid to clump together, forming larger particles called flocs.
It happens in Brewing, Winemaking, Cheesemaking, Salad Dressings and more.
.
Flock you late. Say it over and over , get into it, what a great word to say. 😊
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

I was aware of the word Cathy but have never had an opportunity to use it!
I tripped over an unusual word I have mentioned before. 'YEAN'.
"The verb "yean" comes from the Middle English word yenen, which derived from the Old English geēanian or ēanian, meaning "to give birth to young," particularly for sheep or goats. The root is Proto-Indo-European h₂egʷnós, meaning "lamb," connecting "yean" to related words like the Latin agnus (lamb), the Greek amnos (lamb), and the English word "ewe"".
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Julie in Norfolk »

I came across flocculation while I was looking after or at least monitoring water treatment plants, so for me the word not only has a meaning but a smell as well!
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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Post by Stanley »

You've triggered off a memory there Julie. At one time, when I was off the road and working in the garage at West Marton Dairies I was given responsibility for running the sewage treatment plant for the dairy. I soon learned that it was a good day when the solids flocculated and bad when they didn't and remained in emulsion.....
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