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Thread: Just a thought
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7th December 2017, 11:05 AM #1
Just a thought
We probably all know several feckless people BUT who do you know who is feck???
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7th December 2017, 12:03 PM #2
Hmmm, just this morning I described someone as gormless (a Melbourne driver of course), then realised that I had never heard of the word gorm by itself
I got sick of sitting around doing nothing - so I took up meditation.
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8th December 2017, 08:20 AM #3
Feck (or fek or feic) is a form of effeck, which is in turn the Scots cognate of the modern English word effect. However, this Scots noun has additional significance:
- Efficacy; force; value; return
- Amount; quantity (or a large amount/quantity)
- The greater or larger part (when used with a definite article)
From the first sense we derive feckless, meaning witless, weak or ineffective; worthless; irresponsible; indifferent; lazy.
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8th December 2017, 08:22 AM #4
gormless
from mid 18th century (originally as gaumless ): from dialect gaum ‘understanding’ (from Old Norse gaumr‘care, heed’) + -less.
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8th December 2017, 09:20 AM #5
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8th December 2017, 02:57 PM #6
A Gormless Feck and you really have a doozy.
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8th December 2017, 04:54 PM #7
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9th December 2017, 08:44 AM #8
While it's often maintained that the word doozy derives from the "Duesenberg" in the name of the famed Duesenberg Motor Company, this is impossible on chronological grounds. Doozy was first recorded (in the form dozy) in eastern Ohio in 1916, four years before the Duesenberg Motor Company began to manufacture passenger cars; the related adjective doozy, meaning "stylish" or "splendid," is attested considerably earlier, in 1903. So where did doozy come from? Etymologists believe that it's an altered form of the word daisy, which was used especially in the late 1800s as a slang term for someone or something considered the best.
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12th December 2017, 07:24 PM #9
Not necessarily the best. More "outstanding" or "noticeable." This allows the term to describe an inferiority as much as a superiority.
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