Nipply

Clark Whelton cwhelton at MINDSPRING.COM
Tue Mar 19 20:01:51 UTC 2002


I've heard this word applied to Farah Fawcett, but never to the weather.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gareth Branwyn" <garethb2 at EARTHLINK.NET>
To: <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2002 2:11 PM
Subject: Nipply


> It's fascinating to me how terms become "viral," and seemingly, all of a
> sudden, pop up everywhere at once. Take "nipply," meaning that there's a
> chill in the air. I'm not sure when I first heard this, but it's
> definitely not new. I hadn't heard it used in years, but now, I've heard
> it three times in the past few weeks and someone just submitted it to
> the Jargon Watch column. This go-round, I think I first heard it used by
> an extreme sports figure (Johnny Mosley? Tony Hawk?) on television
> (obviously a significant broadcast point for slang). Then a computer
> programmer friend used it in a phone conversation the other day and a
> San Francisco computer developer just sent it to me as a Jargon Watch
> item (obviously unaware that it's not a new term). Then my wife used it
> last night when I asked her how cold it was outside as we were leaving
> for dinner. My wife watches little TV and doesn't hang out online. When
> I asked her, she said she'd only heard it recently, maybe at one of her
> gigs (she's a musician).
>
> I think the first time I heard the term was in an extreme sports
> context, so maybe it originates there, or is at least popular in such
circles.
>



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