[Ads-l] "Boner" as sexual term versus word for 'big mistake' or 'funny goof-up' =?UTF-8?Q?=E2=80=93_?=post-1951?
Wilson Gray
hwgray at GMAIL.COM
Sun May 10 11:59:58 UTC 2020
> into the 1970s, though it was already pretty rare by then.
I never heard it till 1969, when a parent quoted it to me as having been
used by its seven-year-old son. OTOH, I've been familiar with the phrase,
_on the bone_ "possessed of a boner," since my own pre-adolescence.
On Sun, May 10, 2020 at 4:20 AM Stanton McCandlish <smccandlish at gmail.com>
wrote:
> I'd been aware of the survival of "boner" in the sense of 'an
> embarrassing error' or 'a laughable mistake', and sometimes a derived usage
> that seemed to mean something along the lines of 'an over-the-top joke or
> skit' (i.e. intentional rather than accidental humor), into the 1970s,
> though it was already pretty rare by then.
>
> This caught my eye:
> https://screenrant.com/joker-boner-comic-meme/
>
> Short version: a 1951 Batman comic is all about the Joker and a series of
> his "boner" crimes. It just overwhelmingly dwells on the word, in panel
> after panel, in phrasing that looks too double-entrendre to be accidental.
> I have to wonder whether the penile sense was already established slang by
> this date, but not permeated enough that censors at the Comics Code
> Authority would catch it.
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> 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
------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
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