Monday, Mar. 03, 1947
Mahaha
THE AMERICAN THESAURUS OF SLANG (1,231 pp.)--Lesfer V. Berrey and Melvin Van den Bark--Crowell ($6.50).
American slang breeds faster than editors can edit or printers can print. The original edition of the mammoth American Thesaurus of Slang (TIME, March 2, 1942) had more than 100,000 words & phrases in it. By the time it hit the bookstores, it was already slightly arky. Now Lester V. Berrey and Melvin Van den Bark have provided 5,000-6,000 more terms, partly teen-age talk, partly military slang, for a new, enlarged edition. A good many of the contributions sound like a disc jockey's idea of how a real, live jazz fan talks. Samples:
satisfactory: creamy, darby, glassy
unsatisfactory: creepy, drooly, gleepy
unpopular person: drizzle, drone, fumb, glom, herkle, hinkle, square, toad
confused: miced up
silly talk: mahaha
character labels: Austin from Boston, fluke from Dubuque, groan from Bayonne, keeno from Reno, leery from Erie, mute from Butte, noisy from Boise, pester from Chester, skunk from Podunk, trixie from Dixie.
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