Q: "jag" (n) & "dun" (n), 1930
Alison Murie
sagehen7470 at ATT.NET
Sat Feb 6 23:44:16 UTC 2010
On Feb 6, 2010, at 1:10 PM, Joel S. Berson wrote:
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> Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster: "Joel S. Berson" <Berson at ATT.NET>
> Subject: Q: "jag" (n) & "dun" (n), 1930
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>
> I don't know what to make of "jag" (n) and "dun" (n) in the
> following, a satire of a newspaper wedding report:
>
> "In addition to his jag he [the groom] carried a pocket knife, a
> bunch of keys, a dun for the ring and his usual look of imbecility."
>
> According to MacDougall, Curtis D. Hoaxes. 2nd ed. New York: Dover
> Publications, 1958, pages v-vi, this appeared in January 1930 in the
> Fountain Inn (S.C.) Tribune, ed./publ. Robert E. Quillen. MacDougall
> does not give any more precise citation. ["a dun for the ring" shows
> up in Google Books: The voice of small-town America: the selected
> writings of Robert Quillen, p. 78, but with a date of June 6, and
> perhaps 1929 (see TofC for "The Bride is a Skinny, Fast Little
> Idiot.") Page 2 indicates a reprint in Cosmopolitan, September 1933.]
>
> For "jag" the closest I can come (which doesn't seem very near) is
> "jag, n1", "5. A jagged piece of metal fitted on the end of the
> ramrod of a rifle, and used, with some tow or rag fastened to it, to
> clean the barrel"
>
> For "dun" (noun), I see (but do not put much faith in) "dun,
> n1", "3. A name for various dusky-coloured flies used in angling,
> and for artificial flies imitating these."
>
> Joel
>
~~~~~~~~~~
Why not a bill for the ring? More'n likely he didn't pay for it when
getting it.
AM
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