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|    Message 296,382 of 297,461    |
|    Ross Clark to Peter Moylan    |
|    Re: Word of the day: ?Papoose?    |
|    04 Sep 24 16:26:39    |
      From: benlizro@ihug.co.nz              On 4/09/2024 12:10 p.m., Peter Moylan wrote:       > On 04/09/24 01:53, Steve Hayes wrote:       >       >> Yes, 'twas the Wikipedia reference that gave me the impression that       >> the "child" usage was common in the USA, and, as Peter Moylan points       >> out, in Australia. Elsewhere it seems to be understood primarily as       >> a child holder.       >       > Well, I'm not sure about "common in Australia". The word is rare here in       > either meaning; we know it only from North American sources.              And let me point out that the North Americans themselves know it only       from "certain sources". It's not an everyday word. It's part of a       special vocabulary they have read or seen used (historically) with       reference to Indians (along with "squaw", "brave", "wampum", "how!" and       others). That's the reason for a certain vagueness about its meaning.       >       > I should also point out that my youngest child is 36 years old, so my       > understanding of child carriers is a long way out of date. I do have       > grandchildren, but I carry them in child seats that are installed over       > the back seats of my car.       >              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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