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"Chris.B" wrote
English is my first language and I had never heard of "fother" either. It may have Danish (Viking) roots: "Foder" with a soft 'd' pron."th" as in English "the" is food for animals in danish.(e.g. foderstoffer) Perhaps Stockton simply meant "stuffing with hay?" ie. Horsey winter grub in a nose bag. Apt to be a little uncomfortable one might have thought. But each to their own. ;-) Since he hasn't [yet] explained what he meant, I guess you are correct. |
#22
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In sci.astro.amateur message , Sun, 21 Oct
2012 10:15:36, Howard Lester posted: "Chris.B" wrote "Dr J R Stockton" wrote Obtain a pinafore, and fother it. "Fother" it? "Fother" is not in my dictionary, so I am guessing you mean to fasten it in some way.... ? No. Perhaps genuine English is not your native language? The word was known to Wikipedia. According to your source: "Fother" is a noun for a variable unit of measure. Not a verb. The article is short enough. You should have been able to get as far as the second paragraph. See also in http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/USN/Navy/cu31924030898583.pdf (10MB). For an 1864 USN document, however, it seems well behind RN practice of half a century or more earlier; thrumming should greatly improve the efficacy of fothering. In fact, I should have written "thrum it" instead of "fother it"; but "thrum" has, it seems, a possibly better-known alternative meaning. -- (c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. Mail via homepage. Turnpike v6.05 MIME. Web http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms and links; Astro stuff via astron-1.htm, gravity0.htm ; quotings.htm, pascal.htm, etc. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
#23
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On 22 Okt., 20:52, Dr J R Stockton
wrote: In fact, I should have written "thrum it" instead of "fother it"; but "thrum" has, it seems, a possibly better-known alternative meaning. That was a U2 hit, wasn't it? "Tattle and Thrum." |
#24
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"Dr J R Stockton" wrote
See also in http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/USN/Navy/cu31924030898583.pdf (10MB). For an 1864 USN document, however, it seems well behind RN practice of half a century or more earlier; thrumming should greatly improve the efficacy of fothering. In fact, I should have written "thrum it" instead of "fother it"; but "thrum" has, it seems, a possibly better-known alternative meaning. OHHHHHH, of COURSE! Why didn't you say so in the first place!? What the hell is "thrumming??" ;-) Is that adapted from "The Little Thrummer Boy?" |
#25
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![]() "Howard Lester" wrote in message ... "Dr J R Stockton" wrote See also in http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/USN/Navy/cu31924030898583.pdf (10MB). For an 1864 USN document, however, it seems well behind RN practice of half a century or more earlier; thrumming should greatly improve the efficacy of fothering. In fact, I should have written "thrum it" instead of "fother it"; but "thrum" has, it seems, a possibly better-known alternative meaning. OHHHHHH, of COURSE! Why didn't you say so in the first place!? What the hell is "thrumming??" ;-) Is that adapted from "The Little Thrummer Boy?" No. It was his Fother. |
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In sci.astro.amateur message , Tue, 23 Oct
2012 18:21:50, Howard Lester posted: "Dr J R Stockton" wrote See also in http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/USN/Navy/cu31924030898583.pdf (10MB). For an 1864 USN document, however, it seems well behind RN practice of half a century or more earlier; thrumming should greatly improve the efficacy of fothering. In fact, I should have written "thrum it" instead of "fother it"; but "thrum" has, it seems, a possibly better-known alternative meaning. OHHHHHH, of COURSE! Why didn't you say so in the first place!? What the hell is "thrumming??" ;-) Is that adapted from "The Little Thrummer Boy?" Wikipedia has not yet reached your area? But you want "thrum", mot "thrumming", there. Webster knows it, too - read all the way down. -- (c) John Stockton, nr London UK. Turnpike v6.05 MIME. Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQish topics, acronyms, & links. Check boilerplate spelling -- error is a public sign of incompetence. Never fully trust an article from a poster who gives no full real name. |
#27
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"Dr J R Stockton" wrote
What the hell is "thrumming??" ;-) Is that adapted from "The Little Thrummer Boy?" Wikipedia has not yet reached your area? But you want "thrum", mot "thrumming", there. Webster knows it, too - read all the way down. "Thrum" is in Webster's, all right, and here's the relevant definition therein: "1 a) the row of warp thread ends left on a loom when the web is cut off b) any of these ends 2 any short end thread or fringe 3 short pieces of woolen or hempen yarn for thrumming canvas." Now, that really helps me with my cold-weather pants problem. You certainly display quite a snotty attitude, devoid of a sense of humor (unless yours is drier than the Atacama Desert). |
#28
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In article id,
Dr J R Stockton wrote: In sci.astro.amateur message , Tue, 23 Oct 2012 18:21:50, Howard Lester posted: "Dr J R Stockton" wrote See also in http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/USN/Navy/cu31924030898583.pdf (10MB). For an 1864 USN document, however, it seems well behind RN practice of half a century or more earlier; thrumming should greatly improve the efficacy of fothering. In fact, I should have written "thrum it" instead of "fother it"; but "thrum" has, it seems, a possibly better-known alternative meaning. OHHHHHH, of COURSE! Why didn't you say so in the first place!? What the hell is "thrumming??" ;-) Is that adapted from "The Little Thrummer Boy?" Wikipedia has not yet reached your area? But you want "thrum", mot "thrumming", there. Webster knows it, too - read all the way down. And we all know that "mot" is short for "bon mot" which is of course a witty remark. But I'm not sure I understand the context you are using it here. Please elucidate. |
#29
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In sci.astro.amateur message , Thu, 25 Oct
2012 06:33:26, Howard Lester posted: "Dr J R Stockton" wrote What the hell is "thrumming??" ;-) Is that adapted from "The Little Thrummer Boy?" Wikipedia has not yet reached your area? But you want "thrum", mot "thrumming", there. Webster knows it, too - read all the way down. "Thrum" is in Webster's, all right, and here's the relevant definition therein: "1 a) the row of warp thread ends left on a loom when the web is cut off b) any of these ends 2 any short end thread or fringe 3 short pieces of woolen or hempen yarn for thrumming canvas." Now, that really helps me with my cold-weather pants problem. You certainly display quite a snotty attitude, devoid of a sense of humor (unless yours is drier than the Atacama Desert). I give those to whom I reply what they deserve; that's good for them, whether they like it or not. Thrum the inside of a large pinafore, and fother yourself for warmth. -- (c) John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v6.05 MIME. Web http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQish topics, acronyms, & links. Proper = 4-line sig. separator as above, a line exactly "-- " (SonOfRFC1036) Do not Mail News to me. Before a reply, quote with "" or " " (SonOfRFC1036) |
#30
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"Dr J R Stockton" wrote
I give those to whom I reply what they deserve; that's good for them, whether they like it or not. Thrum the inside of a large pinafore, and fother yourself for warmth. I shall do that -- whatever the hell it is you're talking about. Giving you the benefit of the doubt as to your character, I will assume I am correct about your sense of humor: it's the driest I have ever encountered. |
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