Hook-em-Snivy: Difference between revisions
(Set Game Eras to Predecessor) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|Term=Hook-em-Snivy | |Term=Hook-em-Snivy | ||
|Game Family=Hook-em-snivy | |Game Family=Hook-em-snivy | ||
|Game Eras=Predecessor | |Game Eras=Predecessor | ||
|Invented Game=No | |||
|Description=<p>Our single reference to this game comes from an 1847 Alabama newspaper in its attempt to describe curling to southern readers: “Did you ever play ‘bass ball,’ or ‘goal,’ or ‘hook-em-snivy,’ on the ice?” Its nature is unknown. “Hookum-snivy” is slang for adultery, not that it matters.</p> | |||
|Sources=<p><span>The </span><em>Alabama Reporter</em><span>, as reprinted in </span><em>Spirit of the Times</em><span> </span>(January 16, 1847)<span>, page 559.</span><span> </span><span>Provided by David Block, 2/28/2008.</span></p> | |||
|Comment=<p>Protoball asked Mister Google about the word "hookum snivy", and he, rather less helpfully and rather more cryptically than usual, said this: "My Quaker grandmother, born in Maryland in 1823, used [the word] in my hearing when she was about seventy years old. She said that it was a barbarism in use among common people and that we must forget it.</p> | |||
|Has Supplemental Text=No | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 21:16, 5 December 2018
Game | Hook-em-Snivy |
---|---|
Game Family | Hook-em-snivy |
Location | |
Regions | |
Eras | Predecessor |
Invented | No |
Tags | |
Description | Our single reference to this game comes from an 1847 Alabama newspaper in its attempt to describe curling to southern readers: “Did you ever play ‘bass ball,’ or ‘goal,’ or ‘hook-em-snivy,’ on the ice?” Its nature is unknown. “Hookum-snivy” is slang for adultery, not that it matters. |
Sources | The Alabama Reporter, as reprinted in Spirit of the Times (January 16, 1847), page 559. Provided by David Block, 2/28/2008. |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Comment | Protoball asked Mister Google about the word "hookum snivy", and he, rather less helpfully and rather more cryptically than usual, said this: "My Quaker grandmother, born in Maryland in 1823, used [the word] in my hearing when she was about seventy years old. She said that it was a barbarism in use among common people and that we must forget it. Edit with form to add a comment |
Query | Edit with form to add a query |
Has Supplemental Text |
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />