[Ads-l] "smacked-ass"/"face like a smacked arse"

Wilson Gray hwgray at GMAIL.COM
Thu Feb 8 21:04:55 UTC 2018


> "Big red nose, big red face, just like a smacked arse.”

A smacked arse, like the described face, is red, right? So, this cite may
be irrevelant WRT the meaning of any of the others.

Youneverknow.

On Thu, Feb 8, 2018 at 2:37 PM, Yagoda, Ben <byagoda at udel.edu> wrote:

> I am looking into to the provenance of the above expressions. “Smacked
> ass,” which I first heard circa 1982, is an insult that appears to be
> limited to the Philadelphia area. To the extent I could discern the
> location of the author of every cite I could find on Google Books and other
> databases, it was Philly, for example, crime writer Lisa Scottoline, Rough
> Justice: "Then I hold a press conference where I tell the world that the
> mayor is a smacked ass.” The first Google Books citation is from a 1977
> criminology text, quoting (presumably) a criminal: "I just asked for change
> for a ten-dollar bill and felt like a real smacked-ass to myself.” The
> snippet view doesn’t allow me to search for any info on the person being
> quoted, but one of the coauthors, the late James Inciardi, was a professor
> at my institution, the University of Delaware, and may have done fieldwork
> in Philly, less than an hour away.
>
> Somebody used it on a bulletin board, was asked what it meant, and
> replied, “Northeastern US slang for ‘complete idiot.” Someone else
> responded, "Funny, I've never heard of that in my 30 years of existence,
> all of it in the Northeast.” Then the original poster said, "Philadelphia,
> actually. Maybe it was just my mother.” (http://boards.straightdope.
> com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=207765)
>
> Green’s Dictionary of Slang has no entry for the term (neither does DARE),
> but it does have “Face like a smacked arse,” defined as “a phrase used to
> describe someone who looks very depressed.” It appears to be common in
> Ireland and the North of England. Jonathon’s first cite for it is 2000 but
> I found a 1987 quotation on Google Books:  "Big red nose, big red face,
> just like a smacked arse.”—Cedar, by James Murphy. “Face like a smacked
> arse” has gotten quite popular, with 23 Google Books hits since 2010.
>
> Any guidance or information appreciated. And I’d be interested in if
> anyone outside of Philadelphia or the United Kingdom has heard it.
>
> Ben
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
>



-- 
-Wilson
-----
All say, "How hard it is that we have to die!"---a strange complaint to
come from the mouths of people who have had to live.
-Mark Twain

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