Saunterer
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- | Saunterer in Hungarian is [[õdöngõ]], õgyelgõ, lézengõ | + | [[Category:Glossary]] |
+ | Saunterer in Hungarian is [[õdöngõ]], õgyelgõ, lézengõ, and is a word used by [[Stimes Addisson]] to denote an [[egg]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Extrapolation == | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | :''"Sanctus" (Latin for "holy") was an early Christian mantra; it crept into music as a chant, a device that lingers to this day ("Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty..."). Generalized, a sanctus is any such hymn. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''More interesting is the [[Black Sanctus]], which, per the OED, is "a kind of burlesque hymn; a discord of harsh sounds expressive of contempt or dislike (formerly used as a kind of serenade to a faithless wife)." [[Monkey|Organ grinders]] and [[Masturbation|accordion squeezers]] pump out black sancti on the streets of Italy to this day. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''The word eventually devolved into the English "saunter," which, long ago, referred to one touched by the muse, wandering in a reverie, bringing forth an incantation. The magical components of the word were later lost, and it came to be more-or-less synonymous with "meander." | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''Curiously, the neutral form of sanctus (sanctum) came to mean a holy place; though saunter and sanctum share a common root, they have branched into completely opposite meanings of place/non-place, though they share inexplicit connotations of solitude and purpose. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :--Sanctuary. [[Elysius Dubord|Dubord, Elysius]]. 1954. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''"Sanctus," that mantra, that chant; I moan into your tender [[ear]], "holy, holy, holy." | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''But you groan, burlesque; your discord, your [[Black Sanctus]], it serenades this faithless wife. [[Monkey|Organs grind]] and [[Masturbation|squeeze]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''"Saunter"; I care not; wandering in reverie, my incantation ensares. Your sanctum is mine; place/non-place: we share solitude and purpose. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :-- [[Out By The Wood Shed: A Study in Puti-Core Reversalism]]. [[Dr. Peter Von Fondle|Von Fondle, Peter, PhD.]] 1955. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Usage == | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | "...and quit the Life of an insignificant Saunterer about Town, for that of an useful Country-Gentleman..." -- Berkeley. "Giant brains, or machines that think." 1735. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == See Also == | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | * [[Dowd Morhart]] | ||
+ | * [[Stop! Thief!]] | ||
+ | * [[Watermelon]] |
Current revision
Saunterer in Hungarian is õdöngõ, õgyelgõ, lézengõ, and is a word used by Stimes Addisson to denote an egg.
[edit]
Extrapolation
- "Sanctus" (Latin for "holy") was an early Christian mantra; it crept into music as a chant, a device that lingers to this day ("Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty..."). Generalized, a sanctus is any such hymn.
- More interesting is the Black Sanctus, which, per the OED, is "a kind of burlesque hymn; a discord of harsh sounds expressive of contempt or dislike (formerly used as a kind of serenade to a faithless wife)." Organ grinders and accordion squeezers pump out black sancti on the streets of Italy to this day.
- The word eventually devolved into the English "saunter," which, long ago, referred to one touched by the muse, wandering in a reverie, bringing forth an incantation. The magical components of the word were later lost, and it came to be more-or-less synonymous with "meander."
- Curiously, the neutral form of sanctus (sanctum) came to mean a holy place; though saunter and sanctum share a common root, they have branched into completely opposite meanings of place/non-place, though they share inexplicit connotations of solitude and purpose.
- --Sanctuary. Dubord, Elysius. 1954.
- "Sanctus," that mantra, that chant; I moan into your tender ear, "holy, holy, holy."
- But you groan, burlesque; your discord, your Black Sanctus, it serenades this faithless wife. Organs grind and squeeze.
- "Saunter"; I care not; wandering in reverie, my incantation ensares. Your sanctum is mine; place/non-place: we share solitude and purpose.
[edit]
Usage
"...and quit the Life of an insignificant Saunterer about Town, for that of an useful Country-Gentleman..." -- Berkeley. "Giant brains, or machines that think." 1735.
[edit]