what 'they' be sayin .... ' i'm in my feelin's ' .... LMAO !
See, It's like, YOU all ACTUALLY MADE ME LEARN THese SONGs .... PLAYED frequently .... its not riGht .... i am actually crying about this.
not laughing. crying.
There are many renditions of this tune .
Some of them not to mention in this particular space .
o h my G !
My GrandD had many nicknames but his government was/is that. iT'S SO SO SAD. SO SO SAD.
That story. I wonder what really happened there. I mean you're just gonna slide up on the melodies and profess that like that? WOW ! All anyone has is what others have seen from the outside looking in. There is not anything in place showing where it is, from the actual source of the matter.
CROCODILE TEARS!!!!!
They were done, so WRONG, so WRONG !
They had it hard then. I thank and appreciate all that they did for me and mine/d.
I bet you tried the same moves on them then.
reigned .
HE'S A CLOWN ?
see that so-called evil laughing doll in one of my previous posts.
waite, here you GO >>>click it and see ! ---->SUPER de DUPER LMAO's ... Whayt en 1992... ? I saida, who what when why where and how ? lol. this is funnee, its just so so funny ahahahahahahhahahah IT IS SO RIDICULOUS ridiculous 1540s, from L. ridiculosus "laughable," from ridiculus "that which excites laughter," from ridere "to laugh." howler 1832, "animal that howls," agent noun from howl (v.). Meaning "glaring blunder, ridiculous mistake" is first recorded 1890. malapropism 1826, from Mrs. Malaprop, character in Sheridan's play "The Rivals" (1775), noted for her ridiculous misuse of large words (e.g. "contagious countries" for "contiguous countries"), her name coined from malapropos. bathos "anticlimax, a descent from the sublime to the ridiculous," 1727, from Gk. bathos "depth," related to bathys "deep;" introduced by Pope. mummery (n.) 1520s, "performance of mumming," from O.Fr. mommerie, from momer (see mummer). Transferred sense of "ridiculous ceremony or ritual" is from 1540s. derisive 1620s, "characterized by derision," from L. deris-, pp. stem of deridere (see derision) + -ive. Meaning "ridiculous" is from 1896.
/\ CLICK THAT LINK right above here and look at those clowns /\
*******************************************************************************
ANYWAY what do you all record for words that clown stemmed from ?
clown (v.) c.1600, from clown (n.); colloquial sense of "to behave inappropriately" (e.g. clown around, 1932) attested by 1928, perhaps originally in music performance slang. Related: Clowned; clowning. clown (n.) 1560s, also cloyne, "rustic, boor, peasant," origin uncertain. Perhaps from Scandinavian dialect (cf. Icelandic klunni "clumsy, boorish fellow;" Swed. kluns "a hard knob, a clumsy fellow"), or akin to N.Fris. klönne "clumsy person," or, less likely, from L. colonus "colonist, farmer." Meaning "fool, jester" is c.1600. "The pantomime clown represents a blend of the Shakes[pearean] rustic with one of the stock types of the It. comedy" [Weekley]. Meaning "contemptible person" is from 1920s. coulrophobia Look up coulrophobia at Dictionary.com "morbid fear of clowns," by 2001 (said in Web sites to date from 1990s or even 1980s), a popular term, not from psychology, possibly facetious, though the phenomenon is real enough; said to be built from Gk. kolon "limb," with some supposed sense of "stilt-walker," hence "clown" + -phobia; ancient Gk. words for "clown" were sklêro-paiktês, from paizein "to play (like a child);" or deikeliktas; other classical words used for theatrical clowns were related to "rustic," "peasant" (cf. L. fossor "clown," lit. "laborer, digger," related to fossil). The whole creation looks suspiciously like the sort of thing idle pseudo-intellectuals invent on the Internet and which every smarty-pants takes up thereafter; perhaps it is a mangling of Modern Gk. klooun "clown," which is the English word borrowed into Greek. Hob (n.) Look up Hob at Dictionary.com "clown, prankster," short for hobgoblin (q.v.). Hence, to play (the) hob "make mischief" (by 1834). loris Look up loris at Dictionary.com small primate of Sri Lanka, 1774, from Fr. loris (Buffon), of unknown origin, said to be from obsolete Du. loeris "booby, clown." tomfool (n.) Look up tomfool at Dictionary.com "buffoon, clown," 1640s, from M.E. Thom Foole, personification of a mentally deficient man (mid-14c.), see Tom + fool (n.). hobbledehoy (n.) Look up hobbledehoy at Dictionary.com "clumsy or awkward youth," 1530s, of uncertain origin and the subject of much discussion. First element is probably hob in its sense of "clown, prankster" (see hobgoblin), the second element perhaps is M.Fr. de haye "worthless, untamed, wild," lit. "of the hedge." buffoon Look up buffoon at Dictionary.com 1540s, "type of pantomime dance," 1580s, "clown," from M.Fr. bouffon (16c.), from It. buffone "jester," from buffare "to puff out the cheeks," a comic gesture, of echoic origin. Also cf. -oon. bozo Look up bozo at Dictionary.com "muscular low-I.Q. male," c.1910, perhaps from Sp. bozal, used in the slave trade and also to mean "one who speaks Spanish poorly." Bozo the clown was created 1940 at Capitol Records as the voice in a series of story-telling records for children ["Wall Street Journal," Oct. 31, 1983]. slapstick Look up slapstick at Dictionary.com "farcical physical comedy, horseplay," 1926, from slapstick (1896) a device consisting of two sticks fastened together so as to slap loudly when a clown or actor hits somebody with it, or to make a sound-effect offstage; from slap and stick (n.). chuff Look up chuff at Dictionary.com "pleased, happy," c.1860, British dialect, from obsolete chuff "swollen with fat" (1520s). A second British dialectal chuff has an opposite meaning, "displeased, gruff" (1832), from chuff "rude fellow," or, as Johnson has it, "a coarse, fat-headed, blunt clown" (mid-15c.), of unknown origin. Related: Chuffed. zany (n.) Look up zany at Dictionary.com comic performer, 1580s, from Fr. zani, from It. zani, zanni "a zany, clown," originally Zanni, Venetian dialect variant of Gianni, pet form of Giovanni "John." A stock character in old comedies, he aped the principal actors. patch (n.2) Look up patch at Dictionary.com "fool, clown," 1540s, perhaps from It. pazzo "fool," which is possibly from O.H.G. barzjan "to rave." Form perhaps influenced by folk etymology derivation from patch (n.1), on notion of a fool's patched garb. But Buck says pazzo is originally euphemistic, and from L. patiens "suffering," in medical use, "the patient." droll (adj.) Look up droll at Dictionary.com 1620s, from Fr. drôle "odd, comical, funny" (1580s), in M.Fr. a noun meaning "a merry fellow," possibly from M.Du. drol "fat little fellow, goblin," or M.H.G. trolle "clown," ultimately from O.N. troll "giant, troll" (see troll (n.)). Related: Drolly; drollish. lob (v.) Look up lob at Dictionary.com "send up in a slow, high arc," 1824 (implied in lobbing), but the word existed 16c. in various senses suggesting heavy, pendant, or floppy things, and probably is ultimately from an unrecorded Old English word; cf. E.Fris. lobbe "hanging lump of flesh," Du. lob "hanging lip, ruffle, hanging sleeve," Dan. lobbes "clown, bumpkin." Related: Lobbed; lobbing. The noun in this sense is from 1875, from the verb. lout (n.) Look up lout at Dictionary.com 1540s, "awkward fellow, clown, bumpkin," perhaps from a dialectal survival of M.E. louten (v.) "bow down" (c.1300), from O.E. lutan "bow low," from P.Gmc. *lut- "to bow, bend, stoop" (cf. O.N. lutr "stooping," which might also be the source of the modern English word), from PIE *leud- "to lurk" (cf. Goth. luton "to deceive," O.E. lot "deceit), also "to be small" (see little). Non-Germanic cognates probably include Lith. liudeti "to mourn;" O.C.S. luditi "to deceive," ludu "foolish." Sense of "cad" is first attested 1857 in British schoolboy slang. villain (n.) Look up villain at Dictionary.com c.1300, "base or low-born rustic," from Anglo-Fr. and O.Fr. villain, from M.L. villanus "farmhand," from L. villa "country house" (see villa). The most important phases of the sense development of this word may be summed up as follows: 'inhabitant of a farm; peasant; churl, boor; clown; miser; knave, scoundrel.' Today both Fr. vilain and Eng. villain are used only in a pejorative sense. [Klein] Meaning "character in a novel, play, etc. whose evil motives or actions help drive the plot" is from 1822. goof Look up goof at Dictionary.com 1916, Amer.Eng., "stupid person," perhaps a variant of English dialect goff "foolish clown" (1869), from 16c. goffe, probably from M.Fr. goffe "awkward, stupid," of uncertain origin. Or English goffe may be from M.E. goffen "speak in a frivolous manner," possibly from O.E. gegaf "buffoonery," and gaffetung "scolding." Sense of "a blunder" is c.1954, probably influenced by gaffe. The verbal meaning "waste time" is 1932; the verb meaning "make a mistake" is from 1941. Goof off "loaf" is also from 1941. fool (n.) Look up fool at Dictionary.com late 13c., "silly or stupid person," from O.Fr. fol "madman, insane person; idiot; rogue; jester," also "blacksmith's bellows," also an adj. meaning "mad, insane" (12c., Mod.Fr. fou), from L. follis "bellows, leather bag" (see follicle); in V.L. used with a sense of "windbag, empty-headed person." Cf. also Skt. vatula- "insane," lit. "windy, inflated with wind." The word has in mod.Eng. a much stronger sense than it had at an earlier period; it has now an implication of insulting contempt which does not in the same degree belong to any of its synonyms, or to the derivative foolish. [OED] Meaning "jester, court clown" first attested late 14c., though it is not always possible to tell whether the reference is to a professional entertainer or an amusing lunatic on the payroll. As the name of a kind of custard dish, it is attested from 1590s (the food also was called trifle, which may be the source of the name). As an adjective, fool "foolish, silly" is considered modern U.S. colloquial, but it is attested from early 13c. Feast of Fools (early 14c.), from M.L. festum stultorum) refers to the burlesque festival celebrated in some churches on New Year's Day in medieval times. Fool's gold "iron pyrite" is from 1829. Fool's paradise "state of illusory happiness" is from mid-15c. Foolosopher, a most useful insult, turns up in a 1549 translation of Erasmus. Fool's ballocks is described in OED as "an old name" for the green-winged orchid. There is no foole to the olde foole [Heywood, 1546]
SMH !
See, It's like, YOU all ACTUALLY MADE ME LEARN THese SONGs .... PLAYED frequently .... its not riGht .... i am actually crying about this.
not laughing. crying.
There are many renditions of this tune .
Some of them not to mention in this particular space .
o h my G !
My GrandD had many nicknames but his government was/is that. iT'S SO SO SAD. SO SO SAD.
That story. I wonder what really happened there. I mean you're just gonna slide up on the melodies and profess that like that? WOW ! All anyone has is what others have seen from the outside looking in. There is not anything in place showing where it is, from the actual source of the matter.
CROCODILE TEARS!!!!!
They were done, so WRONG, so WRONG !
They had it hard then. I thank and appreciate all that they did for me and mine/d.
I bet you tried the same moves on them then.
reigned .
HE'S A CLOWN ?
HE'S A CLOWN ?
HE'S A CLOWN ?
HE'S A CLOWN ?
see that so-called evil laughing doll in one of my previous posts.
waite, here you GO >>>click it and see ! ---->SUPER de DUPER LMAO's ... Whayt en 1992... ? I saida, who what when why where and how ? lol. this is funnee, its just so so funny ahahahahahahhahahah IT IS SO RIDICULOUS ridiculous 1540s, from L. ridiculosus "laughable," from ridiculus "that which excites laughter," from ridere "to laugh." howler 1832, "animal that howls," agent noun from howl (v.). Meaning "glaring blunder, ridiculous mistake" is first recorded 1890. malapropism 1826, from Mrs. Malaprop, character in Sheridan's play "The Rivals" (1775), noted for her ridiculous misuse of large words (e.g. "contagious countries" for "contiguous countries"), her name coined from malapropos. bathos "anticlimax, a descent from the sublime to the ridiculous," 1727, from Gk. bathos "depth," related to bathys "deep;" introduced by Pope. mummery (n.) 1520s, "performance of mumming," from O.Fr. mommerie, from momer (see mummer). Transferred sense of "ridiculous ceremony or ritual" is from 1540s. derisive 1620s, "characterized by derision," from L. deris-, pp. stem of deridere (see derision) + -ive. Meaning "ridiculous" is from 1896.
/\ CLICK THAT LINK right above here and look at those clowns /\
*******************************************************************************
ANYWAY what do you all record for words that clown stemmed from ?
clown (v.) c.1600, from clown (n.); colloquial sense of "to behave inappropriately" (e.g. clown around, 1932) attested by 1928, perhaps originally in music performance slang. Related: Clowned; clowning. clown (n.) 1560s, also cloyne, "rustic, boor, peasant," origin uncertain. Perhaps from Scandinavian dialect (cf. Icelandic klunni "clumsy, boorish fellow;" Swed. kluns "a hard knob, a clumsy fellow"), or akin to N.Fris. klönne "clumsy person," or, less likely, from L. colonus "colonist, farmer." Meaning "fool, jester" is c.1600. "The pantomime clown represents a blend of the Shakes[pearean] rustic with one of the stock types of the It. comedy" [Weekley]. Meaning "contemptible person" is from 1920s. coulrophobia Look up coulrophobia at Dictionary.com "morbid fear of clowns," by 2001 (said in Web sites to date from 1990s or even 1980s), a popular term, not from psychology, possibly facetious, though the phenomenon is real enough; said to be built from Gk. kolon "limb," with some supposed sense of "stilt-walker," hence "clown" + -phobia; ancient Gk. words for "clown" were sklêro-paiktês, from paizein "to play (like a child);" or deikeliktas; other classical words used for theatrical clowns were related to "rustic," "peasant" (cf. L. fossor "clown," lit. "laborer, digger," related to fossil). The whole creation looks suspiciously like the sort of thing idle pseudo-intellectuals invent on the Internet and which every smarty-pants takes up thereafter; perhaps it is a mangling of Modern Gk. klooun "clown," which is the English word borrowed into Greek. Hob (n.) Look up Hob at Dictionary.com "clown, prankster," short for hobgoblin (q.v.). Hence, to play (the) hob "make mischief" (by 1834). loris Look up loris at Dictionary.com small primate of Sri Lanka, 1774, from Fr. loris (Buffon), of unknown origin, said to be from obsolete Du. loeris "booby, clown." tomfool (n.) Look up tomfool at Dictionary.com "buffoon, clown," 1640s, from M.E. Thom Foole, personification of a mentally deficient man (mid-14c.), see Tom + fool (n.). hobbledehoy (n.) Look up hobbledehoy at Dictionary.com "clumsy or awkward youth," 1530s, of uncertain origin and the subject of much discussion. First element is probably hob in its sense of "clown, prankster" (see hobgoblin), the second element perhaps is M.Fr. de haye "worthless, untamed, wild," lit. "of the hedge." buffoon Look up buffoon at Dictionary.com 1540s, "type of pantomime dance," 1580s, "clown," from M.Fr. bouffon (16c.), from It. buffone "jester," from buffare "to puff out the cheeks," a comic gesture, of echoic origin. Also cf. -oon. bozo Look up bozo at Dictionary.com "muscular low-I.Q. male," c.1910, perhaps from Sp. bozal, used in the slave trade and also to mean "one who speaks Spanish poorly." Bozo the clown was created 1940 at Capitol Records as the voice in a series of story-telling records for children ["Wall Street Journal," Oct. 31, 1983]. slapstick Look up slapstick at Dictionary.com "farcical physical comedy, horseplay," 1926, from slapstick (1896) a device consisting of two sticks fastened together so as to slap loudly when a clown or actor hits somebody with it, or to make a sound-effect offstage; from slap and stick (n.). chuff Look up chuff at Dictionary.com "pleased, happy," c.1860, British dialect, from obsolete chuff "swollen with fat" (1520s). A second British dialectal chuff has an opposite meaning, "displeased, gruff" (1832), from chuff "rude fellow," or, as Johnson has it, "a coarse, fat-headed, blunt clown" (mid-15c.), of unknown origin. Related: Chuffed. zany (n.) Look up zany at Dictionary.com comic performer, 1580s, from Fr. zani, from It. zani, zanni "a zany, clown," originally Zanni, Venetian dialect variant of Gianni, pet form of Giovanni "John." A stock character in old comedies, he aped the principal actors. patch (n.2) Look up patch at Dictionary.com "fool, clown," 1540s, perhaps from It. pazzo "fool," which is possibly from O.H.G. barzjan "to rave." Form perhaps influenced by folk etymology derivation from patch (n.1), on notion of a fool's patched garb. But Buck says pazzo is originally euphemistic, and from L. patiens "suffering," in medical use, "the patient." droll (adj.) Look up droll at Dictionary.com 1620s, from Fr. drôle "odd, comical, funny" (1580s), in M.Fr. a noun meaning "a merry fellow," possibly from M.Du. drol "fat little fellow, goblin," or M.H.G. trolle "clown," ultimately from O.N. troll "giant, troll" (see troll (n.)). Related: Drolly; drollish. lob (v.) Look up lob at Dictionary.com "send up in a slow, high arc," 1824 (implied in lobbing), but the word existed 16c. in various senses suggesting heavy, pendant, or floppy things, and probably is ultimately from an unrecorded Old English word; cf. E.Fris. lobbe "hanging lump of flesh," Du. lob "hanging lip, ruffle, hanging sleeve," Dan. lobbes "clown, bumpkin." Related: Lobbed; lobbing. The noun in this sense is from 1875, from the verb. lout (n.) Look up lout at Dictionary.com 1540s, "awkward fellow, clown, bumpkin," perhaps from a dialectal survival of M.E. louten (v.) "bow down" (c.1300), from O.E. lutan "bow low," from P.Gmc. *lut- "to bow, bend, stoop" (cf. O.N. lutr "stooping," which might also be the source of the modern English word), from PIE *leud- "to lurk" (cf. Goth. luton "to deceive," O.E. lot "deceit), also "to be small" (see little). Non-Germanic cognates probably include Lith. liudeti "to mourn;" O.C.S. luditi "to deceive," ludu "foolish." Sense of "cad" is first attested 1857 in British schoolboy slang. villain (n.) Look up villain at Dictionary.com c.1300, "base or low-born rustic," from Anglo-Fr. and O.Fr. villain, from M.L. villanus "farmhand," from L. villa "country house" (see villa). The most important phases of the sense development of this word may be summed up as follows: 'inhabitant of a farm; peasant; churl, boor; clown; miser; knave, scoundrel.' Today both Fr. vilain and Eng. villain are used only in a pejorative sense. [Klein] Meaning "character in a novel, play, etc. whose evil motives or actions help drive the plot" is from 1822. goof Look up goof at Dictionary.com 1916, Amer.Eng., "stupid person," perhaps a variant of English dialect goff "foolish clown" (1869), from 16c. goffe, probably from M.Fr. goffe "awkward, stupid," of uncertain origin. Or English goffe may be from M.E. goffen "speak in a frivolous manner," possibly from O.E. gegaf "buffoonery," and gaffetung "scolding." Sense of "a blunder" is c.1954, probably influenced by gaffe. The verbal meaning "waste time" is 1932; the verb meaning "make a mistake" is from 1941. Goof off "loaf" is also from 1941. fool (n.) Look up fool at Dictionary.com late 13c., "silly or stupid person," from O.Fr. fol "madman, insane person; idiot; rogue; jester," also "blacksmith's bellows," also an adj. meaning "mad, insane" (12c., Mod.Fr. fou), from L. follis "bellows, leather bag" (see follicle); in V.L. used with a sense of "windbag, empty-headed person." Cf. also Skt. vatula- "insane," lit. "windy, inflated with wind." The word has in mod.Eng. a much stronger sense than it had at an earlier period; it has now an implication of insulting contempt which does not in the same degree belong to any of its synonyms, or to the derivative foolish. [OED] Meaning "jester, court clown" first attested late 14c., though it is not always possible to tell whether the reference is to a professional entertainer or an amusing lunatic on the payroll. As the name of a kind of custard dish, it is attested from 1590s (the food also was called trifle, which may be the source of the name). As an adjective, fool "foolish, silly" is considered modern U.S. colloquial, but it is attested from early 13c. Feast of Fools (early 14c.), from M.L. festum stultorum) refers to the burlesque festival celebrated in some churches on New Year's Day in medieval times. Fool's gold "iron pyrite" is from 1829. Fool's paradise "state of illusory happiness" is from mid-15c. Foolosopher, a most useful insult, turns up in a 1549 translation of Erasmus. Fool's ballocks is described in OED as "an old name" for the green-winged orchid. There is no foole to the olde foole [Heywood, 1546]
SMH !
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