when "intercourse" got funny
Amorelli
mariam11 at VIRGILIO.IT
Thu Sep 28 09:40:46 UTC 2006
This would seem to be in line with the liberal use of 'ejaculate', by
luminaries such as Agatha Christie, with the meaning of 'blurt'.
M.I.Amorelli
EAP, Faculty of Economics,
Sassari,
Italy
----- Original Message -----
From: "Leslie Savan" <lsavan at VERIZON.NET>
To: <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2006 4:40 PM
Subject: Re: when "intercourse" got funny
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> Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster: Leslie Savan <lsavan at VERIZON.NET>
> Subject: Re: when "intercourse" got funny
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>
> "Intercourse" got funny, Paul Fussell wrote in The Great War and Modern
> Memory, in the wake of WWI, which brought about a loss of innocence and a
> rise of irony:
> "Another index of the prevailing innocence [before the war] is a
> curious prophylaxis of language. One could use with security words which a
> few years later, after the war, would constitute obvious double entendres.
> One could say intercourse, or erection, or ejaculation without any risk of
> evoking a smile or a leer." (p.23)
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jonathan Lighter" <wuxxmupp2000 at YAHOO.COM>
> To: <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2006 10:23 AM
> Subject: Re: when "intercourse" got funny
>
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>> Poster: Jonathan Lighter <wuxxmupp2000 at YAHOO.COM>
>> Subject: Re: when "intercourse" got funny
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> -----
>>
>> That's right. But as I remember it, the "talk" solution was more often
> (i.e., maybe from three out of the four teens I observed, the fourth being
> me) was greeted with puzzlement and skepticism. So the joke must be
> rather
> older.
>>
>> JL
>> Charles Doyle <cdoyle at UGA.EDU> wrote:
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>> Poster: Charles Doyle
>> Subject: Re: when "intercourse" got funny
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> -----
>>
>> Wasn't the mid-1960s about the time when we started hearing the riddle
> (belonging to the genre that was being discussed on this list a few months
> ago), "What's a 4-letter word ending with '-k' that means 'intercourse'?"?
> The wit of the riddle depends on the word's having as its primary (or at
> least its first-thought-of) meaning "copulation" but also on the awareness
> of "talk" as a possible meaning.
>>
>> --Charlie
>> ____________________________________________________
>>
>> ---- Original message ----
>> >Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 05:30:46 -0700
>> >From: Jonathan Lighter
>> >Subject: when "intercourse" got funny
>> >To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
>> >
>> >Some months ago it was observed that there was a time when the word
> "intercourse" could be used with a perfectly innocent meaning. Now, of
> course, its denotation has narrowed so drastically that it is impossible
> to
> use the word in nonsexual contexts without eliciting counterproductive,
> muffled guffaws.
>> >
>> > Just when the innocent era came to an end is not clear, but the
> benchmark in my own memory is 1964 when mention of the Non-Intercourse Act
> of 1809 caused such wordless mirth in my co-ed high-school American
> History
> class that Mr. Callahan had to tell us to get serious, that's what they
> called it.
>> >
>> > And yet, also in 1964, the novelist and critic George P. Elliott was
> publishing the following sentence in which he attempted to characterize
> the
> novel as a genre :
>> >
>> > "The content of the [ideal] novel as here defined is intercourse among
>> > a
> few credible characters and between them and the reader, who knows them by
> their public actions, their intimate words, and their unrecognized
> impulses."
>> >
>> > Elliott was born around 1920. Could the shift have occurred so late in
> his life that he didn't realize the umhilarity in what he was writing ? Or
> was his mind clouded by his doctorate in literature ?
>> >
>> > When did "intercourse" get funny ?
>> >
>> > JL
>>
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