GREAZY and GREA SY

Beverly Flanigan flanigan at OHIOU.EDU
Fri Mar 11 19:11:25 UTC 2005


Bagby Atwood, wasn't it?

At 01:57 PM 3/11/2005, you wrote:
>At 12:02 PM -0500 3/11/05, Dennis R. Preston wrote:
>>I reckon I would call it greazy Tony's (not a pejorative as far as
>>some foods are concerned by the way). The light and delicate of my
>>earlier post was misleading. But if I stuck my hand into axle grease
>>I'd say it was greazy; if I picked up something which had, say,
>>sewing machine oil on it, I would say it was "greasy." Both
>>situations are "negative" (I don't want no grease on me), which seems
>>to be my requirement for such usage.
>A related distinction between food grease (greasy) and mechanical
>greaze (greazy) is one maintained by others, IIRC, as reported in the
>classic dialect-anthology paper on the topic.  (Can someone remind me
>who the author is?  I think his name starts with an A, but my
>anthologies aren't on me at the moment, nor is DARE.)
>
>Larry



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