ADS-L Digest - 24 Jul 2005 to 25 Jul 2005 (#2005-207)
Wilson Gray
wilson.gray at RCN.COM
Tue Jul 26 20:20:15 UTC 2005
On Jul 26, 2005, at 2:46 PM, James A. Landau wrote:
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> Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster: "James A. Landau" <JJJRLandau at AOL.COM>
> Subject: Re: ADS-L Digest - 24 Jul 2005 to 25 Jul 2005 (#2005-207)
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>
> of no particular importance, but they strike my curiosity
>
> In a message dated Mon, 25 Jul 2005 18:16:16 -0500, "Mullins, Bill"
> _Bill.Mullins at US.ARMY.MIL_ (mailto:Bill.Mullins at US.ARMY.MIL) cites:
>
>> THE ARGOT OF THE STUDIO WORKERS By GLENDON ALLVINE.
>> New York Times; Feb 3, 1935; pg. X4 col 4.
>> <snip>
>> OFF TO BUFFALO -- Hurry up, or exit with all possible speed."
>
> is this perhaps related to the expression "shuffle off to Buffalo"?
>
>> <snip>
>> "PIG -- Current transformer."
>
>
> "pig" for "transformer" is electrical power jargon since at least the
> mid-60's, when I heard it from an electrical engineer roommate in
> college. Most
> commonly found as "pole pig", a transformer up on a telephone pole.
>
> A wild guess at the etymology is that a transformer resembles an ingot
> of
> iron in shape and perhaps in size, and cast iron ingots have been
> referred to as
> "pig iron" since, according to one account, Catalan ironworkers
> invented
> cast iron back in the Middle Ages. The reason for the term "pig
> iron" is that
> the ingots in their molds reminded the ironworkers of a mother pig
> feeding her
> piglets.
>
> Wilson Gray writes :"Remember when "uptight" was "up
> tight" and also had a positive meaning that was once more widespread
> than the negative one?"
>
> This may not be very relevant, but when I was in Basic Training in
> 1969 a
> sergeant when he wanted to compliment you said "your shit is up tight".
You got an actual compliment from a cadre member while still in Basic?
That *is* up tight, not to mention outta sight! You must have been some
"sharp soldier," if that phrase was still used in your day,
> I've
> never been able to hear the term "uptight" since without thinking of a
> DI.
In my day - late '50's - "D[ril]I[instructor]" was only a marine
expression disdained by the War (black GI slang term for the Army).
Unfortunately, I'm having a senior moment and I can't recall what the
term in use was in those days. I "have an inkling in the back of my
thinking-cap" that "instructor" was also part of the Army term, but
that's all I can come up with.
>
> Wilson Gray writes "FWIW, The Movie Channel once showed brief
> infomercials
> between movies.
> The one that featured gaffer's tape showed it looking a lot more like
> what I know as "electrician's tape" - smooth, black, stretchy plastic
> -
> and not at all like duck/duct tape - textured, silvery, non-stretchy
> cloth"
>
> A problem here is that, back in the 1950's when my father was teaching
> me
> carpentry and wiring, there was no such thing as
> "electrician's tape".
To paraphrase a line from an old movie, "Among yidn, a goy is no yid,
But, among goyim, a goy can be a yid." That is, though electricians may
know that there's no such thing as "electrician's tape,"
non-electricians "know" that there is. It's like civilians not knowing
the difference between "As you were!" and "Carry on!"
-Wilson Gray
> Instead
> an electrician had to use two different pieces of tape to seal a join
> in an
> electrical wire. First he used a rough-surfaced non-stretchy black
> tape
> which may have been cloth---certainly it did not feel like plastic.
> This layer
> provided the elecrical insulation but had poor adhesive
> qualities---it stuck
> just enough to stay in place while waiting for the second layer..
> Then over
> the first layer he used a tape that was either rubber or plastic (I
> don't
> remember which) and may have been stretchy.. This tape provided good
> adhesion and
> kept the inner layer in place, as well as providing a protective
> covering
> over the inner layer.. One of these two tapes (I don't remember
> which) was
> called "friction tape".
>
> - James A. Landau
>
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