Ugly Hedgehog - Photography Forum
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
General Chit-Chat (non-photography talk)
Every time I use this word my children say WHAT?
Page <<first <prev 3 of 5 next> last>>
Aug 3, 2021 10:17:58   #
tmehrkam Loc: Houston,Tx
 
Never heard it in Texas. But I am only 68 unlike some of you Guys. :-}

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 11:18:22   #
JohnSwanda Loc: San Francisco
 
DirtFarmer wrote:
Gilbert & Sullivan, Iolanthe, 1882

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71BXaf0x5hA&ab_channel=GilbertSullivan

(Song)
When you're lying awake
With a dismal headache
And repose is taboo'd by anxiety
I conceive you may use
Any language you choose
To indulge in, without impropriety;
For your brain is on fire
The bedclothes conspire
Of usual slumber to plunder you:
First your counterpane goes
And uncovers your toes
And your sheet slips demurely from under you;

Then the blanketing tickles
You feel like mixed pickles
So terribly sharp is the pricking
And you're hot, and you're cross
And you tumble and toss
Till there's nothing ‘twixt you and the ticking
Then the bedclothes all creep
To the ground in a heap
And you pick 'em all up in a tangle;
Next your pillow resigns
And politely declines
To remain at its usual angle!
Well, you get some repose
In the form of a doze
With hot eyeballs and head ever aching
But your slumbering teems
With such horrible dreams
That you'd very much better be waking;
For you dream you are crossing
The Channel, and tossing
About in a steamer from Harwich
Which is something between
A large bathing machine
And a very small second-class carriage

And you're giving a treat
(Penny ice and cold meat)
To a party of friends and relations
They're a ravenous horde
And they all came on board
At Sloane Square and South Kensington Stations
And bound on that journey
You find your attorney
(Who started that morning from Devon);
He's a bit undersized
And you don't feel surprised
When he tells you he's only eleven
Well, you're driving like mad
With this singular lad
(By the by, the ship's now a four-wheeler)
And you're playing round games
And he calls you bad names
When you tell him that "ties pay the dealer";
But this you can't stand
So you throw up your hand
And you find you're as cold as an icicle
In your shirt and your socks
(The black silk with gold clocks)
Crossing Salisbury Plain on a bicycle:

And he and the crew
Are on bicycles too
Which they've somehow or other invested in
And he's telling the tars
All the particulars
Of a company he's interested in
It's a scheme of devices
To get at low prices
All goods from cough mixtures to cables
(Which tickled the sailors)
By treating retailers
As though they were all vegetables
You get a good spadesman
To plant a small tradesman
(First take off his boots with a boot-tree)
And his legs will take root
And his fingers will shoot
And they'll blossom and bud like a fruit-tree
From the greengrocer tree
You get grapes and green pea
Cauliflower, pineapple, and cranberries
While the pastry-cook plant
Cherry brandy will grant
Apple puffs, and three corners, and Banburys

The shares are a penny
And ever so many
Are taken by Rothschild and Baring
And just as a few
Are allotted to you
You awake with a shudder despairing

You're a regular wreck
With a crick in your neck
And no wonder you snore
For your head's on the floor
And you've needles and pins
From your soles to your shins
And your flesh is a-creep
For your left leg's asleep
And you've cramp in your toes
And a fly on your nose
And some fluff in your lung
And a feverish tongue
And a thirst that's intense
And a general sense
That you haven't been sleeping in clover;
But the darkness has passed
And it's daylight at last
And the night has been long
Ditto, ditto my song
And thank goodness they're both of them over!

https://genius.com/Gilbert-and-sullivan-when-youre-lying-awake-with-a-dismal-headache-lyrics
Gilbert & Sullivan, Iolanthe, 1882 br br http... (show quote)


So it's a 19th century term - no wonder I never heard of it at 72.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 11:30:21   #
Dannj
 
yssirk123 wrote:
I don't think we have any counterpanes in NJ - we do have bedspreads though.


Agree😂 Definitely not a Jersey thing.

Reply
 
 
Aug 3, 2021 12:23:31   #
Old Coot
 
Bridges wrote:
I think we called it short-sheeting someone! This sounds like something we'd do at summer camp but the fold near the pillow was doubled-over a couple of times so as to make the sheet envelope only about 3 ft. long. Someone crawling into their bed wouldn't be able to get their feet down to the end of the bed. They would have to redo their bed before they could sleep in it.


That,s a french bed

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 13:40:28   #
Amielee Loc: Eastern Washington State
 
I'm from the North West and have heard that term since I was a child. It is a cover for a bed also known as a bed spread, but of a slightly lesser weight.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 13:50:20   #
lxu532 Loc: Cherry Hill, NJ
 
Never heard it used in NJ.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 13:53:48   #
tomad Loc: North Carolina
 
I'm 72 and never heard that word...

Reply
 
 
Aug 3, 2021 14:12:55   #
burkphoto Loc: High Point, NC
 
AzPicLady wrote:
I am from the Midwest. The word was used to denote a coverlet.


I'm from the Midwest, too, originally, and have no idea what a counterpane or a coverlet is. I would have to look it up.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 15:32:32   #
jimfl938 Loc: Acworth, GA
 
cedymock wrote:
Counterpane
Guess if you are not in your sixties you don't use the word or know what it is. My mother and aunts always used to describe a specific item. What say you UHH members have you used this word and know what it describes?


Nope, never heard it used. I am 82, so I guess I bypassed it.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 15:37:02   #
Smudgey Loc: Ohio, Calif, Now Arizona
 
What are it 🤔

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 16:37:28   #
khildy Loc: Brownsburg, IN
 
jaymatt wrote:
It must be a regional term. I am ‘way over sixty and have never heard the word--had to look it up. It’s certainly not a term used in the Midwest, so I learned something new today. Thx.


I grew up in the Midwest also. Nope, never heard that word before.

Reply
 
 
Aug 3, 2021 16:51:38   #
David Y-T Loc: S. Chester Co., Pennsylvania, USA
 
It's a bedcover. Word came from France to England in about the fifteen hundreds. First used in Middle English.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 16:56:50   #
SalvageDiver Loc: Huntington Beach CA
 
jaymatt wrote:
It must be a regional term. I am ‘way over sixty and have never heard the word--had to look it up. It’s certainly not a term used in the Midwest, so I learned something new today. Thx.


me too..

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 18:29:23   #
Nigel7 Loc: Worcestershire. UK.
 
I'm English and remember the term from my early childhood. It was a bedspread to cover the old sheets and blankets back in the days before duvets. Not heard the term used over here for 50+ years. Another piece of nostalgia.

Reply
Aug 3, 2021 18:57:57   #
John Hicks Loc: Sible Hedinham North Essex England
 
In the UK a counter pane is a bed cover, you do not hear the use the word at all, but being 74 years I remember my mother and later on my wife ( now sadly deceased ) using the word in that context

Reply
Page <<first <prev 3 of 5 next> last>>
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
General Chit-Chat (non-photography talk)
UglyHedgehog.com - Forum
Copyright 2011-2024 Ugly Hedgehog, Inc.