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- Xref: sparky soc.culture.british:19403 alt.usage.english:11040
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.british,alt.usage.english
- Path: sparky!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!ucthpx!heidi
- From: heidi@ucthpx.uct.ac.za (Heidi de Wet)
- Subject: Re: Back from the UK
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.070719.3612@ucthpx.uct.ac.za>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 93 07:07:19 GMT
- References: <1993Jan22.030456.31470@watson.ibm.com> <C1C17o.29A@ecf.toronto.edu> <C1C3CC.HGL@demon.co.uk> <TSOS.270.727950382@uni-duesseldorf.de> <C1EvH8.MGs@acsu.buffalo.edu>
- Organization: Dept of Elec Eng, UCT
- Lines: 25
-
- meachem@acsu.buffalo.edu (The Meach) writes:
- >In article <TSOS.270.727950382@uni-duesseldorf.de> TSOS@uni-duesseldorf.de (Detlef Lannert) writes:
- >>In article <C1C3CC.HGL@demon.co.uk> gtoal@pizzabox.demon.co.uk (Graham Toal) writes:
- >>
- >>>In article <C1C17o.29A@ecf.toronto.edu> pelton@ecf.toronto.edu (PELTON MATTHEW ALAN) writes:
- >>>:>But isn't "hello" just a contraction of "how the hell are ya"?
- >>>: No. It's a contraction of "God be with you."
-
- That's "goodbye" you're thinking of. Then there's "bloody" from "By
- our Lady", and my personal favourite: "Zounds!" from "God's wounds".
-
- >>>In case anyone doesn't realise this is a joke, hello is derived
- >>>from an old word used to call hounds.
-
- I read somewhere it was coined as a term to be used on the telephone -
- presumably everyone just used "How d'y' do" until then. I suppose "How
- do you do" sounds too ridiculous when you haven't even established who
- you're talking to :-) It derives both from "halloo" (hounds) and from
- the French.
-
- --
- The net is like a vast sea of lutefisk with tiny dinosaur brains embedded
- in it here and there. Any given spoonful will likely have an IQ of 1, but
- occasional spoonfuls may have an IQ more than six times that!
- - James 'Kibo' Parry
-