[Ads-l] DUDDERS and Run Goods

Laurence Horn laurence.horn at YALE.EDU
Thu Feb 4 20:57:37 UTC 2016


I was reflecting a couple of years ago after seeing an entry for it in a 17th century slang dictionary that "dud(s)" is a word with the rare property of having been around for several centuries as a slang item without either making it into unmarked use or disappearing.  (Actually singular "dud" (or "dudde") did go extinct, as the OED notes, but in the plural it seems likely to last forever.)

LH

> On Feb 4, 2016, at 2:09 PM, Robin Hamilton <robin.hamilton3 at virginmedia.com> wrote:
> 
> In a previous message, I said:
> 
>    “DUDDER -- a person who goes into the country and pawns (possibly stolen) goods, or clothes, pretending they were made in London.”
> 
> Actually, I got this backwards.  Poulter has an extended discussion of Dudders elsewhere in the _Discoveries_, from which we can deduce that such people passed-off London-made handkerchiefs as if they were high-quality East India ware. As George correctly noted in his original post, “Goods made in London” implies inferior material.  Rather than being associated with clothes (“Duds”) generally, they seem to have dealt exclusively with handkerchiefs – or so both Moll King in 1747 and John Poulter in 1753 would have us understand.
> 
> The common element to all three figures that Poulter names – Lockers, Dudders, and Fencers – is that they pass-off as smuggled goods, things which were either stolen or inferior.  Tea was exceptionally highly taxed, and as a result would probably have been stolen in London and sold by the Fencer of Slops in the country.  The Dudders’ handkerchiefs were cheap goods passed off as quality material.
> 
> Robin Hamilton
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.americandialect.org&d=AwIFaQ&c=-dg2m7zWuuDZ0MUcV7Sdqw&r=wFp3X4Mu39hB2bf13gtz0ZpW1TsSxPIWYiZRsMFFaLQ&m=FCpHokiy4n7-kvlc2Zg3Gg7alO7gwvQtt-sDcZAO8f8&s=nDAKAhvErDgNqDSa1-C5VyjlAwHZ_I3vur-wKbt5fLQ&e= 

------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org



More information about the Ads-l mailing list