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Last week we had religion-words. This week, just for grins, we'll look at a subset of religion-words: those that somehow involve monks. Starting with the obvious one. monkish – inclined to disciplinary self-denial
. . ."Ach, I don't know. I'm not keen really." . . ."Nonsense!" Tristan said. "I don't know why I haven't thought of it before. This monkish existence is bad for you. Leave all the details to me." – James Herriot, All Creatures Great and Small | ||
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Today's familiar word illustrates how a word can develop a sense far from its original meaning. A certain order of friars, who wore a cloak with a pointed capuche, or hood, was named after the Italian word of 'hood' (cappuccio,). English using the French version of that name, calls them the Capuchin friars. Whoever named this order could not have foreseen the friars' name would become a monkey! The capuchin monkey was so named because it looks somewhat as if it were wearing the hood of a friar's habit. Nor could he have imagined that the friars would become a drink, so named because it has the light-brown color of the Capuchin friars' habit. (Again, the habit. The order's name seems to be 'habit-forming'. [groan]) The drink's name is the Italian name for that order of friars, tracing back to the original 'hood'. cappuccino – coffee with milk; white coffee, esp. as served in espresso coffee-bars, topped with white foam | |||
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lubber – a big, clumsy, stupid fellow; esp. a lazy one; a lout (abbey-lubber was once a common term of reproach for a lazy monk.)
– Katherine Anne Porter, Noon Wine | |||
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I'm wondering how that reconciles with landlubber, a poor or inexperienced sailor. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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banoffi pie – a flan filled with bananas, toffee, and cream [from banana + coffee/toffee] Why is this a monk word? Because it was invented, in 1972, at the Hungry Monk restaurant in Jevington, Sussex. Its creator, Ian Dowding, tells the story here. "The owner of this restaurant … joined up some of the syllables and came up with 'banoffi'. We thought it was incredibly silly."
– Russ Kane and Sally Kane, Shout at the Moon | |||
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Are you saying it's not known in the USA? It's pretty common here in West Sussex - even though it was invented all that way away in East Sussex Richard English | |||
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chartreuse – a pale yellowish apple-green color [from a liqueur (also named chartreuse), of this color, made by the monks of La Grande-Chartreuse]
– E. L. Konigsburg, The View from Saturday As Milo frantically conducted [the orchestra], all the flowers suddenly appeared black, the gray rocks became a lovely soft chartreuse , and even peacefully sleeping [dog] Tock changed from brown to a magnificent ultramarine. Nothing was the color it should have been, and yet, the more he tried to straighten things out, the worse they became. – Norton Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth | |||
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The recipe link doesn't work, but this one might. Recipe I know it doesn't sound great but believe me it is. It's one of my favourite desserts. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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A decade or two ago I labelled myself Expert-Amateur Pastry Chef. Expert because I'm quite good at it (he said, modestly) and Amateur because I do it for love, not for money. The recipe for banoffi pie caught my eye. I read it carefully and decided to try it some time in the near future, so it's now on my List of Things To Do; but the part about boiling unopened cans of condensed milk startled me. I would expect the cans to explode. I read the recipe again and thought the filling sounded a lot like Dulce de Leche, a very popular sauce in Argentina. So I sought a recipe ...... and found one. Notice that the recipe writer recommends punching holes in the cans' tops before boiling. Good idea !! Dulce de Leche ... ... Read more ... | |||
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Yes, that sounds like a Very Bad Idea. | |||
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Many quotes today, for we have two words, each probably from the surname Mulligan. The surname is a double diminutive of Gaelic/Old-Irish mael 'bald', and so means "the little bald (or shaven) one," probably referring to a monk. Hence our two ‘mulligan’ words are indirectly monk-words. mulligan – a second chance to play a golf shot; a "do-over"
– James Patterson and Peter de Jonge, Miracle on the 17th Green [etc.] figurative: “Sandy was an all right person. … But he wasn't the right man for you. Never was. And as for Richard!" . . ."Don't start," I warned. "I've admitted he was a huge mistake. I think I should get a . . . what's that word they use in golf? When you take a bad stroke and it doesn't count?" . . ."A mulligan." . . ."Yeah. Richard was my mulligan." – Mary Kay Andrews, Savannah Breeze
. . .I had to admit I hadn't. "What do you put in them?" . . ."Everything … ." … Everything in one pot. … I watched enthralled as caribou, grouse, pork, rice, potatoes, corn, canned tomatoes, macaroni and celery followed each other into the pot. Johnny laughed. . . ."The more the better. Everything flavors everything else in a real mulligan." Johnny stopped talking to stir. Soon the smell of it was in the air, and the look on Johnny's face was one of reverence. – Benedict Freedman and Nancy Freedman, Mrs. Mike figurative: Every two weeks the children had to report on a book they had read outside class. Marva [the teacher] was accumulating a stockpile of books, some donated and some purchased at charity book fairs or used bookstores. The inventory was a literary mulligan stew, classical authors mixed in with writers of popular children's fiction. E. M. Forster, Somerset Maughm, and William Faulkner shared the shelves with Judy Blume, Roald Dahl, and Shel Silverstein. – Marva Collins, Marva Collins' Way: Updated I was accustomed to a broth of history from my father and Koussaint Rennie, some single topic at a time, but Stanley's version was a brimming mulligan stew. – Ivan Doig, English Creek | |||
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A dervish is a Muslim friar who has taken vows of poverty. One order is called the whirling dervishes, after their ritual of wild, frenzied dancing. The dictionaries give no further meaning for ‘whirling dervish’, but in actual usage the term is also used figuratively, as below. whirling dervish – one in constant frenzied activity
– Vicki Iovine, The Girlfriends' Guide to Toddlers Training an energetic dog is fun. … If you don’t put the time into training your dog to have better overall manners, you will live with a whirling dervish that never learns to simply hang out with people. – Gerilyn J. Bielakiewicz, et al., The Everything Dog Training and Tricks Book Grandma … turns on Grandpa. Get out of it. Out. If you stay a minute longer I’ll take a hatchet to you, you drunken lunatic. By Jesus, I’ll swing at the end of a rope for you. Get out. She runs at him and he melts before this whirling dervish … He stumbles from the house, up the lane, and doesn’t stop till he reaches Melbourne in Australia – Frank McCourt, Angela's Ashes: A Memoir | |||
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