Swell!
From a morbid swelling of the ocean in around 1200 . . .
. . . to an expression of satisfaction around 1930:
All's swell that ends swell.Swell!
Labels: Etymology
Brainstorming about history, politics, literature, religion, and other topics from a 'gypsy' scholar on a wagon hitched to a star.
All's swell that ends swell.Swell!
Labels: Etymology
5 Comments:
All swell that ends swell.
The "'s" is redundant.
All swell that end swell.
The other "s" is also redundant.
I started (in my mind) with Shakespeare:
"All's Well That Ends Well"
I then tried (in my mind) the various 'soundings':
"All's Swell That Ends Swell"
"All Swell That End Swell" etc. . .
I then ran out of time to think rigorously . . .
. . . and you caught me.
Mea culpa . . .
Jeffery Hodges
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HJH,
I don't speak French, but if you do, you might contrive something clever from "Honi soit qui mal y pense" ["Shame be to him who thinks evil of it"].
You probably know that this is the motto of the British chivalric Order of the Garter.
Interestingly, that motto appears at the very end of "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," an epic poem from the middle ages that everyone should read.
Jeffery Hodges
* * *
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