"jeezum crow"
Jonathan Lighter
wuxxmupp2000 at GMAIL.COM
Fri Oct 29 15:07:04 UTC 2010
My only ex. of "Jeezum crow" comes from Stephen King's _It_, but GB turns up
an apparently authentic English use from 1972. (At least the book cited was
actually published that year.)
JL
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Arnold Zwicky <zwicky at stanford.edu> wrote:
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> Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster: Arnold Zwicky <zwicky at STANFORD.EDU>
> Subject: "jeezum crow"
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>
> taboo-avoidance form for "jesus christ"; it appeared in a comment from a
> Facebook friend who grew up in Maine. googling pulls up Vermont and New
> Brunswick as well, and another Facebook friend added northern NY. DARE has
> it for Vermont and Northern NY, but it's clear that the distribution is
> wider, and almost surely takes in New Hampshire as well.
>
> though apparently still geographically restricted. does anyone have reports
> of the form from speakers without a history in this region? (the friend who
> first used it now lives in California, and before that in Boston, but she
> picked it up in her Maine childhood.) Jon, do you have it in your files?
>
> almost surely it was innovated by people in a very small group -- since
> it's fairly distant from the model -- and then spread, but this is the sort
> of history we'll probably never be able to unearth.
>
> arnold
>
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