November 05, 2003, 05:11
Graham NiceBumboat
It was in Maigret book I was reading this morning (A Crime in Holland - one of the best) and made me laugh out loud to the puzzlement of the Kazakh students I was invigilating.
Is it a real word, or was the translator just having a laugh? Would the Americans call it a fannyboat? Was it derrierebateau in the original?
November 05, 2003, 05:46
BobHalequote:
Originally posted by Graham Nice:
It was in Maigret book I was reading this morning (A Crime in Holland - one of the best) and made me laugh out loud to the puzzlement of the Kazakh students I was invigilating.
Is it a real word, or was the translator just having a laugh? Would the Americans call it a fannyboat? Was it derrierebateau in the original?
quote:
bumboat
n. any small boat used for ferrying goods or supplies for sale to a ship at anchor or at a mooring.
Apparently it's from the Dutch
boomschip - canoe.
Glaubt es mir - das Geheimnis, um die größte Fruchtbarkeit und den größten Genuß vom Dasein einzuernten, heisst: gefährlich leben.
- Friedrich Nietzsche
Read all about my travels around the world here.Read even more of my travel writing and poems on my weblog.November 05, 2003, 08:14
Hic et ubiqueAnd perhaps haberdasher will remind us of a certain bumboat woman? (I'd forgotten that her name is Mrs. Cripps, for she's much better known by her nickname.)
November 05, 2003, 10:00
the_bearAye, Little Buttercup – and well called – for you're the rosiest, the roundest, and the reddest beauty in all Spithead.