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This year, I acquired a flip-calendar called Forgotten English. One interesting, archaic word per day, along with its definition and a paragraph of relevant information pertaining to it. It's fascinating reading, and most informative.
Would there be any interest in my posting the Forgotten Word of the Day? I'm thinking hobbit writers might find it especially useful.
As a tease, here is the word for January 30:
Lunting
Walking and smoking a pipe. - John Mactaggart's Scottish Gallovidian Encyclopedia, 1824
Feast Day of St. Aldegard, a patron of those suffering from lung cancer. One misinformed eighteenth-century medico, identified only as a Dr. Forster, is quoted in William Hone's Every-day Book...of Popular Amusements (1826-27) as heartily commending the medicial use of smoking, especially during winter months, because it helped "guard against colds, and above all against the contagion of typhus and other fevers, which are apt to prevail in the early spring." He added: "Smoking tobacco is a very salutary practice in general, as well as being a preventive against infection in particular...Smoking is a custom which should be recommended in the close cottages of the poor, and in great populous towns liable to contagion." An anonymous poem of Forster's time echoed these sentiments:
Tobacco I love and tobacco I'll take,
And hope good tobacco I ne'er shall forsake.
'Tis drinking and wenching destroys still the creature,
But this noble fune does dry up ill nature.
Would there be any interest in my posting the Forgotten Word of the Day? I'm thinking hobbit writers might find it especially useful.
As a tease, here is the word for January 30:
Lunting
Walking and smoking a pipe. - John Mactaggart's Scottish Gallovidian Encyclopedia, 1824
Feast Day of St. Aldegard, a patron of those suffering from lung cancer. One misinformed eighteenth-century medico, identified only as a Dr. Forster, is quoted in William Hone's Every-day Book...of Popular Amusements (1826-27) as heartily commending the medicial use of smoking, especially during winter months, because it helped "guard against colds, and above all against the contagion of typhus and other fevers, which are apt to prevail in the early spring." He added: "Smoking tobacco is a very salutary practice in general, as well as being a preventive against infection in particular...Smoking is a custom which should be recommended in the close cottages of the poor, and in great populous towns liable to contagion." An anonymous poem of Forster's time echoed these sentiments:
Tobacco I love and tobacco I'll take,
And hope good tobacco I ne'er shall forsake.
'Tis drinking and wenching destroys still the creature,
But this noble fune does dry up ill nature.
no subject
Date: Tuesday, February 14th, 2006 10:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Tuesday, February 14th, 2006 10:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Tuesday, February 14th, 2006 10:34 pm (UTC)If you decide to do this, I do hope you'll let me see the results!
*hops up and down in anticipation*
Catherine
no subject
Date: Tuesday, February 14th, 2006 10:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Wednesday, February 15th, 2006 03:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Wednesday, February 15th, 2006 03:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Wednesday, February 15th, 2006 07:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Wednesday, February 15th, 2006 07:41 am (UTC)Forgotten words, yes!