Handley_Page
Draco interdum Vincit
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2007
- Posts
- 78,287
I'm sure that there's a word meaning when the listener hasn't got a scooby what's going on - or being said.
It's embarrassing
It's embarrassing
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Well, I always understood The Haudenosaunee were matrileneal. Women owned the land and a man moved into her longhouse when a couple married. I'd say that was soemewhat unusual, though I seemed to have continued that tradition.![]()
I've always enjoyed Tony Hillerman's Navajo-based detective novels. They usually had a nice chunk of mystery and drama with a good dose of Native American history and education in them.
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I have Navajo idea who that is, but he scooby a very good writer.
I've always enjoyed Tony Hillerman's Navajo-based detective novels. They usually had a nice chunk of mystery and drama with a good dose of Native American history and education in them.
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If you want a lighter, humorous take on the Indian Detective, try DreadfulWater Shows Up by Hartley Goodweather (Thomas King). King can be quite serious; his Massey Lectures and his latest, The Inconvenient Indian, are highly insightful. He played the "token white man" on the CBC radio comedy show "Dead Dog Cafe" when it ran."
Whistle Stop Cafe
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Please translate.
Round here, "scooby" comes from Scooby Do", the rhyming slang for "Ain't got a clue."
So, "I don't know" can emerge as "I ain't got a Scooby".
Don't ask for translation when giving one. Also, don't call oneself English when you don't speak the language popularly known as that. ("Cockney" is ironically a pain in the other end.)
He asked for a translation of how you meant the word, offering the meaning of it he knew so that you would understand why he was asking.
Your non-sequitur insult, by the way, is uncalled for and untrue. We have treated you reasonably on this board, unlike at least one other which is listing those who say they've put you on "ignore." There is no reason to disparage those who are welcoming.
I was using the word not based on any widespread meaning, but for an obvious pun, so there was no need for any type of translation.
My so-called "insult", by the way, is very true. What is not is your description of how I have been treated "on this board, unlike at least one other" which is a reference to members who are also on this same board.
Since I have traded items via international snail mail with HP, I can not only attest to the fact that he is indeed English but a fine English gentleman at that.
Your comment was uncalled for and out of line, LD.
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The Night That the Lights Went Out in Georgia. Yeah, surprised we haven't had rolling blackouts yet.
We've had blackouts here recently. One night my town had no traffic lights for a few hours. I went down to the main street to see if the bar was still going to host my favorite local band. They weren't even open, so I spent a minute watching the drivers be irresponsible. It was strange, sitting in a pitch black town, watching cars drive too fast.
That last line is a politically fascinating image. More mundane,it makes me think of sitting on the front porch after midnight during an oppressively hot summer, watching heat lightning on the horizon.
St. Elmo's Fire
Wow, even after all these years, that song starts right up in my head, though I never saw the movie.