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Skyline of Manhattan over the water. 

A Way with Words: Keep Your Tail Over the Dashboard (#1271)

Series: A Way with Words
From: A Way with Words
Length: 00:54:00

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This week on A Way with Words, crime novelist James Ellroy stops by to talk about slang from the underworld. And Martha tells the spooky story behind the flat hat called a "tam." Also, is a vomitorium really a room in a ancient Roman house? And what does it mean when someone says "keep your tail over the dashboard"? Read the full description.
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Piece Description

This week, McGimpers, geetus, and other underworld lingo from the 1930s. Crime novelist James Ellroy stops by to talk slang terms and reveals his own favorite. Also, is the expression Hear, hear! or Here, here!? Is it bran-new or brand-new? The spooky, creepy story behind the flat hat called a tam. And what does it mean to keep your tail over the dashboard?

Grant talks about the lingo of criminals from 1930s. Here are more examples from police reporter Ben Kendall's 1931 Los Angeles Times article, "Underworld 'Lingo' Brought Up-to-Date":

APPLE-KNOCKER: A yokel; a blunderer. "That big apple-knocker slipped on the top step with a five gallon can of alky."

CREEPER (creep joint): A bawdy house. "Them McGimpers around those creepers will take you every time."

GOLDFISH: Third degree; a police beating. "They took him up and showed him the goldfish, but he never squawked."

GOW: To catch; to jail. "Be careful when you drive because they gow you in this town if you have booze on your breath."

MEAT-WAGON: Ambulance. "If any of those mugs get tough in my join they'll take a trip in the meat wagon."

WING-DING: A fit; berserk. "The sailor pulled a wing ding after the first drink and they called the meat-wagon."

Ask a Roman! A theater student from Texas is having an argument with a friend about the word vomitorium. He says that in ancient Rome, a vomitorium was a room where revelers went to purge after overindulging at the banquet table. True?

How did the term bisque come to mean "an unglazed piece of ceramic work"? Does it have anything to do with the kind of bisque that might be served in a ceramic bowl?

Martha tells the story of the creepy, spooky, surreal, and downright weird Robert Burns poem behind the name for that flat hat called a tam. Read it in translation here.

http://www.robertburns.org.uk/Assets/Poems_Songs/tamoshanter.htm

Quiz Guy John Chaneski puzzle this week is called "Three and a Match." The challenge is to figure out three words from a common category -- say, nationalities --  that go with each of the three clues he mentions. If, for example, three clues are "coat," "court," and "ear," then answers are "pea," "squash," and "cauliflower," and the category is "vegetables." Now try this one: "muffin," "cheese," "fries."

In L. Frank Baum's The Wizard of Oz, the scarecrow gets what he calls a bran-new brain. A caller wonders: Is the correct term bran-new or brand-new?

A former naval flight officer wonders how the term cockpit ever came to mean the part of the aircraft where pilots sit.

You're at a wedding and all the guests raise their glasses in unison and say "Here, here!" Or is it "Hear, hear." Which is it, and why?

Grant answers a caller's question about the origin of griage, a word used increasingly in clinics where flu shots are dispensed.

Crime novelist James Ellroy, author of The Black Dahlia and most recently, Blood's a Rover, tries his hand at a slang quiz. He reveals his favorite slang term, then tries to guess the meaning of the slang words buzzer, sheetwriter, and geetus, and the phrase working the paper.

An Indianapolis woman vaguely remembers that there was a term for the Mohawk Indians who worked on the high beams and girders of some of this country's most famous construction projects. The word she wants: skywalkers. The documentary Grant mentions about these construction workers is here. For the "Lost and Found Sound" piece about them, go here. And the New Yorker article by Joseph Mitchell is here.

http://www.nfb.ca/film/high_steel/

http://www.npr.org/programs/lnfsound/stories/020701.steel.html

http://tinyurl.com/yfcbbxq

What does it mean to have your tail over the dashboard?

A caller wonders if the Spanish and Arabic articles el and al spring from the same linguistic root.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Grant Barrett
Co-host/co-producer of "A Way with Words"
http://waywordradio.org
cell/office (646) 286-2260
gbarrett@waywordradio.org
words@waywordradio.org

Backup contact information:
Stefanie Levine
Senior Producer of "A Way with Words"
cell/office (619) 890-4275
slevine@waywordradio.org

Broadcast History

For broadcast starting Friday, June 18, 2010. This episode first aired November 21, 2009.

Transcript

This week, McGimpers, geetus, and other underworld lingo from the 1930s. Crime novelist James Ellroy stops by to talk slang terms and reveals his own favorite. Also, is the expression Hear, hear! or Here, here!? Is it bran-new or brand-new? The spooky, creepy story behind the flat hat called a tam. And what does it mean to keep your tail over the dashboard?

Grant talks about the lingo of criminals from 1930s. Here are more examples from police reporter Ben Kendall's 1931 Los Angeles Times article, "Underworld 'Lingo' Brought Up-to-Date":

APPLE-KNOCKER: A yokel; a blunderer. "That big apple-knocker slipped on the top step with a five gallon can of alky."

CREEPER (creep joint): A bawdy house. "Them McGimpers around those creepers will take you every time."

GOLDFISH: Third degree; a police beating. "They took him up and showed him the goldfish, but he never squawked."

GOW: To catch; t...
Read the full transcript

Timing and Cues

The show clock:

Billboard: 1:00
Segment 1: 13:00
Music Bed: 1:00
Segment 2: 19:00
Music Bed: 1:00
Segment 3: 19:00
TRT: 54:00

Stations typically take NPR news at the top of the hour and start our
show at :06 with Breaks at :19 and :39 and out at :59.

Here's a typical episode rundown:

--Billboard
--Seg 1
----Intro: 2-3 minutes
----Caller questions: 10-11 minutes
--Break 1:00
--Seg 2
----Word Challenge 4-6 minutes
----Caller questions 13-15 minutes
--Break 1:00
--Seg 3
----Slang Quiz 5-7 minutes
----Caller questions 11-13 minutes
----Credits: 1:00

Intro and Outro

INTRO:

This week on A Way with Words, crime novelist James Ellroy stops by to talk about slang from the underworld. And Martha tells the spooky story behind the flat hat called a "tam." Also, is a vomitorium really a room in a ancient Roman house? And what does it mean when someone says "keep your tail over the dashboard"?

OUTRO:

Additional Files

Additional Credits

Hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett. Produced by Stefanie Levine. Engineered and edited by Tim Felten. Production assistance by Josette Herdell and Jennifer Powell. Recorded at Studio West in Rancho Bernardo, California, and at KQED Radio in San Francisco.

Related Website

http://www.waywordradio.org