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Nosy Parkers and Butternuts (minicast)
November 21, 2007 3:22 am
(@grantbarrett)
Member
Joined: 18 years ago
Grant goes through the mailbag, offering answers about the terms "nosy parker," "out of pocket," and about whether the word "falsehood" has its origins in medieval garb. He also throws a question out to listeners about what is supposedly a mild British oath, "butternut!"
As mentioned in the podcast, the earliest use of "nosey parker" so far found is from 1890 in the British Belgravia magazine, indexed at Google Book Search.
Don't forget: our next brand-new one-hour show airs this weekend. You can hear it over the air and by streaming this Saturday and Sunday (including on KPBS in San Diego) or you can get it by podcast on Monday. Find a way to listen here.
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falsehood (1)
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Flora of North America (3)
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