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Yesterday’s ‘ad infinitum’ puts me in mind of numbers. In some ways, numbers are like people. They can be proper, or at least discrete, but of them are are improper. Some are negative; some are positive. Some are rational; others irrational. They can be transcendental or even imaginary. They can be round or they can have a point – and those that have a point often repeat themselves! Numbers appear in many idioms whose meaning wouldn’t be obvious from the meanings of the individual words. Interestingly, almost all those idioms use one-digit numbers, especially the lowest ones: First Lady, second fiddle, third rate. This week we’ll turn the harder group, and look at some of those that use other numbers. 40 winks – a short sleep (usually not in bed)
– Tom Wolfe, The Bonfire of the Vanities | ||
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Is that meant as a pun, or just a typo? Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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As a pun, of course! The spelling I used is the one pertaining to mathematics. eighty-six – (orig. restaurant/bar slang) to refuse to serve (the item is out, or the customer is unwelcome). by extension: to throw out; to eject or discard; to get rid of
– OSU Daily Barometer (Oregon State University), Oct. 7, 2005 | |||
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Urban Dictionary claims it is from a famous speakeasy, Chumley's, at 86 Bedford Street, in NYC. http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=86 RJA | |||
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This page gives a list of some codes used in US diners. Is that what you are thinking of? Note that most of them are not numeric. They also give a slightly different interpretation of "86": "the kitchen is out of it, or, cancel the order". Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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There's also the phrase, "deep six", meaning to "bury at sea", or by extension, "throw away". Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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I found this site with diner slang. Again, most of it is not numeric, but it is most definitely colorful! ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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Oh, I do remember my dad using moo juice. He had some funny ones! | |||
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I particularly liked "burn the British" ( = English muffin, toasted). | |||
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paint-by-numbers – depreciative: merely mechanical or formulaic (rather than imaginative, original, or natural) [figurative, from “painting” by filling in a pre-printed outline, on which each outlined area is marked with a number indicating the color to be used]
– Baltimore Sun, May 4, 2007 | |||
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"I'm going to find myself a girl Who can show me what laughter means And we'll fill in the missing colors In each other's paint-by-number dreams And then we'll put our dark glasses on And we'll make love until our strength is gone And when the morning light comes streaming in We'll get up and do it again Get it up again ~~~ Jackson Browne -- "The Pretender" | |||
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As a mom, I always thought those paint-by-numbers books for kids stifled their creativity. | |||
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I had wondered about the origin of 40 winks, and I found this link about it here. It seemed to develop in the U.S. around the 1820s. Do those of you in England use the phrase? I also was interested to see that the number 40 was thought to possess supernatural powers. | |||
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Not nearly as much as the old "magic painting" books where you paint over the page with clear water and watch it colour itself in. Now that's stifling creativity. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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yes, it's in common use here. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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the 400 – the highest society of a locality [Coined by Ward McAllister (1827–1895), arbiter of New York City society. Supposedly “four hundred“ was the number of people who really mattered, or the number that Lady Astor’s ballroom could accommodate.]
– University [of California] Chronicle (1906) Even as this has made for a somewhat fairer society than the world of the 400, it has added a note of desperation. – James Fallows, What Did you do in the Class War, Daddy?, Washington Monthly, Oct. 1975 | |||
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Do you think I am included in the really mattered category? Love the 400 concept; I think I'll start using it. When I am mad at someone: "Why should I care what you say? You're not one of the 400!" | |||
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True. I remember those, too. They also have those tracing books where all the kids do are trace pictures with thin tracing paper. I've even thought coloring books stifle creativity a bit because of staying in the lines, but at least you can use the colors you want. That's not the case with the paint by numbers or tracing books or magic painting books. | |||
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23 skidoo (or just ‘skidoo’) – scram; leave quickly [slang, from the first part of the 1900s. Origin unknown – but I’m researching it now. More to come, I hope.]
– Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (P.S.) pie wagon – a police van; a van used to transport prisoners to jail [old slang; rarely seen] | |||
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I've been reading through the entries in a book, Brewer's Dictionary of Modern Phrase and Fable, and it has an entry on "23 skidoo". I offer it only as a start, as I've already run across a few entries I *know* are wrong, and even the author admits in the entry that it's not complete. ---------------------- TWENTY-THREE SKIDDOO Go away; clear off. 'Skidoo' means 'skedaddle', but the reason for the particular number is uncertain. According to one theory, the reference is to air currents that would blow up women's skirts on the corner of Broadway and 23rd Street, New York. Police would shoo away gleeful male spectators with a shout of 'skiddoo!' Another source attributes the number to railway jargon, in which 23 is denoted a message of urgency. -------------------------- KB | |||
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ninety-nine – used by physicians to detect areas of the lungs that have become solidified, as from pneumonia. When the patient speaks or whispers, the sound is loudest in these areas, and the loudness can be noticed by stethoscope or by ‘a palm on the patient’s back. “Ninety-nine” was the usual word spoken, perhaps due to an error. It is said that the test was first developed by a German doctor, who used "neun und neunzig" because the vowel sounds would maximize the effect. English doctors simply translated the German words into English, preserving the meaning but abandoning the sounds! A. A. Milne, of Winnie the Pooh fame, used this term along with a nice pun on “bed”. He tells of a physician who, with typical medical arrogance, ignores his patient's floral preferences.
Of delphiniums (blue) and geraniums (red), And all the day long he'd a wonderful view Of geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue). A Doctor came hurrying round, and he said: "Tut-tut, I am sorry to find you in bed. Just say 'Ninety-nine,' while I look at your chest. Don't you find that chrysanthemums answer the best?" The Dormouse looked round at the view and replied (When he'd said "Ninety-nine") that he'd tried and he'd tried, And much the most answering things that he knew Were geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue). [etc.] – A. A. Milne, The Dormouse and the Doctor | |||
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Ahhhh, used by physcians and nurses, Wordcrafter. I have taught many a student to assess for tactile and auditory fremitus, which is when the patient says 99 as you either listen or feel for the vibrations. Having patients say "eeeee" is also used. I've always loved that A.A. Milne poem. | |||
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In music, the ♪ is called an eight-note in the US and a quaver in the UK. This gives us interesting (though perhaps impractical) names for subdivisions. demiquaver – half a quaver; a 16th note semidemiquaver – half a demiquaver; a 32nd note hemisemidemiquaver – half a semidemiquaver; a 64th note quasihemisemidemiquaver – half a hemisemidemiquaver; a 128th note Not exactly terms you’ll find in everyday use, of course. But fun, and worth much more than a quasihemisemidemiquaver of amusement.
– Nicholas Rosa, Small Computers for the Small Businessman | |||
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Believe it should be hemidemisemiquaver. I had mnemonic in high-school, after the infamous class "History and Development of Science." Now I guess I'll have to add a "q" somewhere... RJA | |||
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Agreed, RA> The way I learned it, was semi, demisemi and hemidemisemi. I didn't know quasi, and even wonder if it is real. | |||
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So ... If eight-note is used in the USA instead of quaver, what are the subdivisions called? Hemisemidemieight-note and so on? Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Sixteenth, etc. | |||
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Beleive it goes as follows: Whole, half and quarter notes have no "flags" flying. The eighth note is the first to have a flag, or quaver. Thereafter semi = 1/16 demisemi = 1/32 hemidemisemi = 1/64 Finally the rarely seen quasihemidemisemi = 1/128 Of course "quasi" is not a strict halving, more like a "sort of." Perhaps because it so hard to know the speed that high, like measuring neutrinos. RJA | |||
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I can name that tune in three notes. (Shows my age, huh?) | ||
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I just came across this description of musical notation. It is notable for its glossary, and use of python. Quasi is not mentioned. | |||
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Reviving a thread... This Chicago Tribune article had some more number words. I liked that "Taking the No. 11 bus" is slang for walking, with the 1's representing your own two legs. And we've all seen older women who dress in young women's clothing. 1661 is slang for that concept, referring to women looking 16 years old from the back but 61 from the front. [No matter what I did, I couldn't look 16 years old from the back. ] They give these competing theories for 86ing something: 1) Article 86 of the New York state liquor code spelled out when a customer should be refused alcohol. 2) A soup kitchen during the Depression made only enough soup for 85 people. 3) Delmonico's restaurant in New York City had rib-eye steak listed as No. 86 on the menu, and often ran out. | |||
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Ed McBain, the famous mystery writer, wrote several books under the pseudonym Richard Stark. In one of those books, a character mentions that an older man's "elevens are up." When asked what that means, he says the tendons on the back of the old man's neck are showing (looking like the number 11), a sign that he is losing body mass, as a portent of impending death. I found a reference to this in another word book later (can't remember where). I thought Kalleh might know if this supposed unhealthy manifestation is true. | ||