AllardChardon
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2008
- Posts
- 4,797
I tried to post a word and it would not work. I'll try again later.
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Second try.
That was a very nice conversation, Naoko. Handley and Og. I love catching up.
lave(1) - noun (before 12c) chiefly dialect: something that is left: RESIDUE
lave(2) - verb (before 12c) 1.a. WASH, BATHE b. to flow along or against 2. POUR ~ vi, archaic: to wash oneself: BATHE
Second try.
That was a very nice conversation, Naoko. Handley and Og. I love catching up.
lave(1) - noun (before 12c) chiefly dialect: something that is left: RESIDUE
lave(2) - verb (before 12c) 1.a. WASH, BATHE b. to flow along or against 2. POUR ~ vi, archaic: to wash oneself: BATHE
Second try.
That was a very nice conversation, Naoko. Handley and Og. I love catching up.
lave(1) - noun (before 12c) chiefly dialect: something that is left: RESIDUE
lave(2) - verb (before 12c) 1.a. WASH, BATHE b. to flow along or against 2. POUR ~ vi, archaic: to wash oneself: BATHE
Lirripipe
When I graduated for my Bachelors, somebody came along the line straightening all our hoods and tidying us up. There was a very anguished look in his eye as he came to the vegetarian in the line who had insisted on having a nylon fur edge instead of rabbit fur to his hood. The other colleges count up how many of your students have got scruffy or incorrectly put-on robes and fine you a bottle of port for every five![]()
I humbly tender the following:-
Lordswike : A subject who betrays his King.
...
Gleaning
Here is a picture of some wheat that I gleaned the other day on a walk to the beach through a wheat field which had just been harvested. There were lots of heads of wheat among the stubble. I picked some up as I went and nibbled the kernels - which were soft and nice - as I walked. There were no wee sleekit cow'rin tim'rous beasties that I could see to pick up the fat heads of grain.
In our local auction this week there was a modern large coloured statuette of a woman gleaner. I didn't bid on it. It was too large and too modern (and was bid beyond my range as I thought it would be).
...
But did you know that gleaning was an ancient form of poor relief? Widows and children were allowed to glean in local fields after they had been harvested. Some families could glean enough to provide food for a month or more (and some farmers were more generous with their leavings!).
I've heard the verb form (?) 'to glean', used in the gathering of information, particularly in a spare environment.
"From what I've been able to glean . . "
Nowadays that's how it's almost always used. We very rarely go 'gleaning' in the original sense of the word, for stray ears of corn which the farmers kindly leave for poor little MILFs wandering along the coastline, when they gather in the sheaves.
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Of course, derivations of that include lavatory.
A lavatorium in an Abbey or Monastery (and presumably in a Nunnery too) is where the residents wash themselves (and defecate). The one at Canterbury Cathedral had a streamlet running under the holes to shit through.
The Roman fort at Houseteads on Hadrians wall had a similar arrangement to that at Canterbury.
My parents bought a house in Glos. in the 1970's which had a five seater wooden bench in the kitchen garden. That went through the garden wall to a stream beyond. It was an early Victorian addition to a Georgian house and apparently was provided for the servants - men and women shared the facility.
Not many people would know how to treat the gleanings, anyway.![]()
Hello, again, happy posters. I was seriously side-tracked by the Rio Olympics and then the chores I ignored while they were on. Remember, I only got cable TV a year ago, after a twenty year absence, and this was my first Olympics in over 20 years. A lot has changed, and some remained the same.
To recap, I love and own a print of Millet's painting of The Gleaners.
So, does that make Jamie Lannister a lordswike?
Og, regarding lavatories, do you know when water was first used for removal of the waste material?
I inherited one of these from my mother's estate;
lavaliere also lavalliere - noun (1906) a pendant on a fine chain that is worn as a necklace
Og, regarding lavatories, do you know when water was first used for removal of the waste material?
It goes back at least to the Roman Empire. Where they stole the idea from is probably lost to history -- although Og will know if anyone does.![]()
Handley, beachbum, and Harold, ancient sanitation is a very interesting subject to me. I am not so sure putting our fecal matter in fresh water is the best way to go with so many people living on the earth.
Fresh water is a limited resource, after all.