October 02, 2004, 03:30
CaterwaullerNew Special Words
I was just last evening at a sing-along party where we all gathered to watch the Robert Preston version of
The Music Man and sing along. <cheesy grin>
A few lovely new (or old) words struck my fancy. I'm always surprised (you'd think I'd get over it) that things like this are actually in dictionaries:
Canoodling (Marcellus says something along the lines of " . . . there's gonna be some canoodling!")
Merriam-Webster says: Etymology: perhaps from English dialect canoodle, noun, donkey, fool, foolish lover
: PET, FONDLE <lovers canoodling in the park>
Frittering ("yes, your young men'll be frittering!")
October 02, 2004, 03:37
Richard EnglishCanoodle is not uncommon in UK English, though it's probably rather an old-fashioned term these days. But it is, I feel, infinitely more appealing than some of the more earthily biological expressions in common use amongst the younger generation.
October 04, 2004, 19:55
KallehWell, maybe this word isn't all that "special," but I laughed so much when I heard it. One of my colleagues was describing a fellow colleague to me (the latter wears short skirts and very low-cut tops) and called her a "flim-flam floozy." Now that one I hadn't heard, but it sure is funny!

October 05, 2004, 14:48
Richard EnglishQuote "...One of my colleagues was describing a fellow colleague to me (the latter wears short skirts and very low-cut tops) ..."
A picture in these cases is worth a plethora of words, even such good ones as flim-flam-floozy (didn't the original one have a floy-floy?)
October 05, 2004, 17:20
tinmanquote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
Well, maybe this word isn't all that "special," but I laughed so much when I heard it. One of my colleagues was describing a fellow colleague to me (the latter wears short skirts and very low-cut tops) and called her a "flim-flam floozy." Now that one I hadn't heard, but it sure is funny!
Here's a picture of
Flim Flam Floozy (about halfway down). It doesn't match your description, though!
Tinman
October 05, 2004, 18:24
Hic et ubiquequote:
Originally posted by Richard English:
flim-flam-floozy (didn't the original one have a floy-floy?)
Almost but not quite. It wasn't flim-flam-floozy, but
Flat-Foot-Floogie, who possessed the floy floy.
I can't tell you why his
floy floy was sometimes a
floy doy. This gap of knowledge will trouble me unceasingly.

October 06, 2004, 03:40
arniequote:
Oh, the flat foot floogie with a floy, floy,
Flat foot floogie with a floy, floy,
Flat foot floogie with a floy, floy,
Floy doy, floy doy, floy doy.
Yeah, yeah yeah, byah, oh, baby!
Yeah, byah, byah, oh, baby!
Yeah, byah, byah, oh, baby!
Yeah, byah, byah!
Ah, they don't write great lyrics like that anymore!
October 07, 2004, 06:41
CaterwaullerI bet that floogie has been frittering away his time with canoodling!