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    fustilugs

    Comment
    Today I read in a magazine that "fustilugs"an English word for "Fettwanst" is.
    Can anyone tell me if this is true and where the word "fustilugs" comes from?

    Thanks
    Authormsmb (278900) 30 Jan 08, 15:29
    Comment
    Ooooo, what a lovely word

    http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-f...

    In those moments when only insults will do, how good it is to turn to the inventive but unsung genius of everyday folk, whose local dialect is so often full of expressive abuse.

    This one still has some small currency, mostly in Yorkshire I believe, though at one time it was widely known across a swathe of England ranging from Cumbria to Devon. That it will almost certainly be unknown to the object of your obloquy will add relish to your utterance, though it might not be too hard to work out it isn’t complimentary. It has rarely been written down outside dialect glossaries, but it did appear in 1621 in a long passage full of terms of opprobrium in The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton: “Every lover admires his mistress, though she be ... a vast virago, or an ugly tit, a slug, a fat fustilugs”.

    Many people know lug as a dialectal or regional English term for the ear (a British comedian used to exhort his audience to listen carefully with the cry “pin back your lugholes!”). If that sense were intended, the term would mean “smelly ears”, suggesting that the person didn’t wash, a plausible origin. However, the Oxford English Dictionary is sure that it’s the idea of lugging around a heavy weight that’s at the root of the matter.
    #1Authormyklausunna (236435) 30 Jan 08, 16:22
    Comment
    http://www.google.de/search?q=%22fustilugs%22...
    ++++
    fustilugs (FUS-ti-lugs) noun

    A fat and slovenly person.

    [From Middle English fusty (smelly, moldy) + lug (to carry something heavy).]

    "'Come on, you old fustilugs,' he called, for she wheezed and blew and mounted with difficulty." Julian Rathbone; Joseph; Little Brown; 2001.

    Mark Twain once said, "When angry, count to four; when very angry, swear." While swearing is considered uncouth and vulgar, it has its place and purpose. It helps provide an emotional release and clears the system. Isn't a verbal venting of emotions better than a physical manifestation?

    You don't have to rely on those worn-out four-letter terms to inflict rude remarks on the offending party. With careful selection of words, it's possible to elevate insults to an art form. Why not use this week's exquisite words for one of those times when nothing less will do?

    But remember, everything in moderation.
    http://wordsmith.org/words/fustilugs.html
    #2Authora google a day ;)30 Jan 08, 16:26
    Comment
    Forgot a bit.

    A grossly fat or slovenly woman.
    :)
    #3Authormyklausunna (236435) 30 Jan 08, 16:26
    Comment
    Well, I never knew that it meant fat! Lovely word, all the same.

    Another term which may interest you is “Buggerlugs” (Lancashire). This has nothing to do with aural sex. Perhaps surprisingly, it is used as a rather affectionate term as in the song “Buggerlugs Loves Sugarbutty” written by the wonderful Bernard Wrigley, a Lancashire actor and songwriter.
    #4AuthorLolo (239708) 30 Jan 08, 16:31
    Comment
    http://louisville.edu/~tavan001/MerseytalkB.html

    Buggerlugs: a generally friendly term of address, ultimately of nautical origin. the term meant big-eared.

    http://people.scs.fsu.edu/~burkardt/fun/wordp...

    [to] buggerlug (to waste time on trivial matters)
    buggerlugs (a jocular or derisive term for another person)

    Lolo, it's a wowell known/used word on the right side of the pennines (Yorkshire) as well *gg* But with a short trawl through the net it's amazing how many differing claims there are as to where it came from.And a bit off topic I came across "buggeration*" which I haven't heard/used since leaving yorkshire about 30 years ago.
    :)

    * Buggeration; An exclamation of annoyance or surprise
    #5Authormyklausunna (236435) 31 Jan 08, 08:18
     
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