Words that are Seldom Used Today!

Made in the shade
Cruisin' for a bruisin'
Heavy
Shindig
Hootnanny
Hoot'nanny is the name of a music programme
on BBC TV with Jools Holland.

I have heard the others, except "Made in the Shade".

Mike.
 

My grandmother used the word muss quite often but I don't hear it in conversation these days.

verb - make (someone's hair or clothes) untidy or messy.
"she sat down carefully so she wouldn't muss her clothes"

noun - a state of disorder.
"no fuss, no muss—nothing left behind except a few little specks of dust"
 
Some years ago I worked in a convenience store, I caught a little boy of about 12 trying to steal something. My very young boss asked what had happened. I told her I caught the kid trying to filch something, whereupon she asked what filch meant.
 
Did you ever hear the word: "Blowse?" Not to be confused with the garment: "Blouse." If you’re constantly running out of the house with your hair all askew, leaving your phone forgotten on the kitchen table, and forgetting your keys, you might be a blowse. In Ye Olde England a blowse actually referred almost solely to an unkempt woman, but I think in our modern times we can apply it to almost anyone!
 
pine - to feel very sad because one wants (something) or because one is not with (someone).
LeatherPostcardFront.jpg
 
Did you ever hear the word: "Blowse?" Not to be confused with the garment: "Blouse." If you’re constantly running out of the house with your hair all askew, leaving your phone forgotten on the kitchen table, and forgetting your keys, you might be a blowse. In Ye Olde England a blowse actually referred almost solely to an unkempt woman, but I think in our modern times we can apply it to almost anyone!
I have used blowsey when describing a certain type of woman.

It seems to me that I am very very old fashioned in my speech.
 
Some think that blowse and brass are similar. It's probably more regional to London, an old brass was a vulgar expression to describe a woman of loose morals. Blowsey is more of a scatterbrain.
 


Back
Top