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Author origin of words/phrases - brassic, chunder...
myke
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Registered: 7th Feb 01
Location: High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
User status: Offline
2nd Mar 05 at 19:21   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

was told yesterday about where these phrases come from. thought it was quite interesting so here they are for anyone that doesn't know.

chunder - comes from shipping days where some one on a higher deck who may have been sea sick would yell 'watch under' as he hurled over the edge to warm people on lower decks.

brassic - i never realised this is actually rhyming slang. borassic lint (medical shit) -> skint

arctic/antarctic - greek or latin for bears i arcticus or arcticos. theres bears at the north pole hence arctic, but no bears at the south pole hence antarctic. no bears.





anyone got any more?
i want to know where the term john doe comes from in relation to dead bodies.
CorsAsh
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Registered: 19th Apr 02
Location: Munich
User status: Offline
2nd Mar 05 at 19:53   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

The phrase is older than you might think. "John Doe" dates from the reign of England's King Edward III (1312-1377). A famous legal document from this period labels a hypothetical landowner "John Doe," who leases land to a "Richard Roe," who then claims the land as his own and kicks out poor John.

The names don't have any particular relevance, other than the fact that a doe is a female deer, while a roe is a smaller species of deer. But the land dispute in question became a famous legal debate, and the names survived their circumstances.

The online legal dictionary FindLaw defines John Doe as a "party to legal proceedings (as a suspect) whose true name is unknown or withheld." The female equivalent is Jane Doe or Mary Major. A second male suspect is dubbed Richard Roe, and subsequent ones are referred to as John Stiles and Richard Miles.

Google is king
myke
Member

Registered: 7th Feb 01
Location: High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
User status: Offline
2nd Mar 05 at 20:06   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

in relation to dead bodies though?
or is it just a generic name for someone possibly annonamous? like joe bloggs.

 
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