Tuesday, 14 June 2016
Wednesday, 8 June 2016
Dad's Dictionary...
As you may have noticed I haven't been blogging for a looooong time,
but I will try from now on to post a little more often. I like blogging.
It's just finding the time. All my children but one have almost or
completely 'flown the nest' and I now find myself in a totally different
situation. Whereas before everybody had their jobs to do around the
house and garden, now guess who has to do it.
So, in keeping with tradition of a word for Wednesday, I am now going to introduce you all to another of me Dad's favourites:
So, in keeping with tradition of a word for Wednesday, I am now going to introduce you all to another of me Dad's favourites:
ARGY-BARGY
This expression remains all too clear for me even now, probably because I was almost always the one on the receiving end! Dad would give me something to do and would invariably add "now, I don't want no argy-bargy, you hear me?" If that particular something involved my brother or sister then my guess is that he felt he had even more reason for adding it!
Argy-bargy was a late nineteenth-century modification of a Scots phrase, which appeared early in the same century in the form argle-bargle. The second part of the two forms, in fact, is no more than a nonsense rhyming repetition of which the English language is full. The technical word for such doublets is reduplication. Think easy-peasy, hoity-toity, super-duper, etc.
So what does argy-bargy mean. In most webs I've looked at it means 'a lively discussion, argument, dispute, perhaps one which becomes bad tempered enough to produce a spat or minor quarrel'
Shall we call it a day?
This expression remains all too clear for me even now, probably because I was almost always the one on the receiving end! Dad would give me something to do and would invariably add "now, I don't want no argy-bargy, you hear me?" If that particular something involved my brother or sister then my guess is that he felt he had even more reason for adding it!
Argy-bargy was a late nineteenth-century modification of a Scots phrase, which appeared early in the same century in the form argle-bargle. The second part of the two forms, in fact, is no more than a nonsense rhyming repetition of which the English language is full. The technical word for such doublets is reduplication. Think easy-peasy, hoity-toity, super-duper, etc.
So what does argy-bargy mean. In most webs I've looked at it means 'a lively discussion, argument, dispute, perhaps one which becomes bad tempered enough to produce a spat or minor quarrel'
Shall we call it a day?
Labels:
Homeschooling / escola a casa,
Language arts,
Words
Monday, 6 June 2016
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