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|    Message 295,523 of 297,461    |
|    HenHanna to All    |
|    First performance of Shaw's "Pygmalion"     |
|    12 Apr 24 21:40:14    |
      XPost: alt.usage.english, rec.puzzles       From: HenHanna@devnull.tb              i recall a good movie with Jimmy Stewart as a Socio-Linguist (?)        collecting slang vocab, or something.                     Where people tend to avoid using the word "bloody"        what do they say to describe, e.g., a bandage covered in blood?                                           3 Hours 25 Minutes ago -- but it's not Showing up in TB (ES)              _____________________First performance of Shaw's "Pygmalion" (11-4-1914)              Newsgroups: sci.lang by: Ross Clark - Fri, 12 Apr 2024 18:06              Ah. Memories of perennial points of discussion with PTD on a.u.e.       Which actual phonetician was the character of Prof. Higgins based on?       What were Shaw's actual views on English accents and dialects?       Was "My Fair Lady" meant to have a sly reference to "Mayfair"?       and probably more.                     But Crystal is interested in one word. This was apparently the talk of       the town when the play opened. Eliza Doolittle (played by Mrs Patrick       Campbell) was to speak the line: "Not bloody likely!" The second word       there was, at the time, not considered printable, nor speakable on the       stage. She did speak it. Nothing happened. She wasn't arrested, the play       was not shut down, but people continued to talk about it for years.                     "Bloody" developed its intensifying force in the late 17th century.       Sometime in the 18th century respectable opinion turned against it, and       Johnson (1755) labels it "very vulgar".                     I used the word as a youth (in Canada); it was certainly colloquial, but       not indecent, and in fact seemed to me like an avoidance term, less       offensive than its alternatives in something like:        Shut the bloody (*damn) (**fucking) window!                     When I arrived in New Zealand, I was surprised to find that many people       still considered it "strong language", not suitable for a respectable       academic. I don't know if it's ever been banned from stage or print       here. But by now things have changed....              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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