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David Keyes

BEKKI'S BOOK BLOG

May 27, 2009 //  by David Keyes

Language fascinates me, and I’ve read a few books on the history of word and phrase origins. It’s always interesting. “I Love it When You Talk Retro” by Ralph Keyes examined the origins of slang in our culture, both current and past. It was pretty good, mostly interesting. A little too political for my taste …

Category: internet-retro

Retroterm of the Day: Maverick.

May 27, 2009 //  by David Keyes

In the mid-19th century, on Texas’s Gulf Coast, Samuel Maverick was given four hundred head of cattle to settle a debt.  Maverick had little interest in ranching, and didn’t even brand his calves. As a result, in southwest Texas, “mavericks” referred to unbranded cattle.  This term subsequently was applied to independent human beings as well. …

Category: Blog

Latest op ed.

May 26, 2009 //  by David Keyes

An op ed I wrote is in today’s Christian Science Monitor: https://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0526/p09s01-coop.html

Category: Blog

Retroterm of the Day: Woodshed.

May 25, 2009 //  by David Keyes

When most homes were heated with burning logs, woodsheds were a common sight outside. Most of these ramshackle outbuildings were far from houses themselves, making them an ideal location for smoking corn silk and touching one’s privates, or someone else’s.  It also was where parents beat their children.  They were “taken to the woodshed.”

Category: Blog

Retroterm of the Day: Iron curtain.

May 23, 2009 //  by David Keyes

“Iron curtain” was the name given fireproof metallic curtains that were first installed in theaters during the late eighteenth century. Since the early twentieth century iron curtain has been used by many a speaker or writer to refer to a country sealed off from its neighbors.  Before Churchill used this term in 1946, Nazi propagandists …

Category: Blog

Retroterm of the day: Limelight.

May 21, 2009 //  by David Keyes

During the 1820s a new type of lamp incorporated a rotating container of incandescent lime which was heated to the point that it gave off intense light. So-called limelighting was used by theaters around the world until it was replaced by electric arc lamps late in the nineteenth century. Nonetheless we still say that actors …

Category: Blog

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