メッセージ: 18
言語: English
ceigered (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月5日 9:35:29
sudanglo:Eek! is not listed in any of my English dictionaries, including the Shorter OED.Reminds me of how kids go "why is that comic man saying 'sigh'?"
I associate it only with speech bubbles in cartoons (American?). I am sure that I have never heard anybody actually say it.
geo63 (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月5日 10:39:56
ceigered:And I remember from my youth the indian "hough" (Winnetou). I wondered what it was and how could they say that (Polish spelling is fonetic, so it is difficult to say "hoŭgĥ" - and those days I knew nothing about English or Esperanto)sudanglo:Eek! is not listed in any of my English dictionaries, including the Shorter OED.Reminds me of how kids go "why is that comic man saying 'sigh'?"
I associate it only with speech bubbles in cartoons (American?). I am sure that I have never heard anybody actually say it.
erinja (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月5日 11:24:21
ceigered (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月5日 11:54:12
or "Hao!" (greeting whilst you hold up your hand in respect to the other).
paulopolo (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月5日 11:57:10
"Hao!" (greeting whilst you hold up your hand in respect to the other).In that book it was that sense only. Hough chief!
And Indians spoke in fluent germane language
geo63 (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月5日 12:16:59
erinja:What is "hough"?A good question! You'd have to ask Karol May for that if he was alive. Frankly I don't know. It is some indian saying: "Hough" = so that shall be.
My old Collins dict says:
hough Brit. n.
1. another word for hock1.
2. (hx). in Scotland, a cut of meat corresponding to shin.
— vb. (tr.)
3. to hamstring (cattle, horses, etc.).
[C14: from Old English hoh heel]
But I don't see any connection with Indians here. Perhaps May invented the word himself.
jefusan (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月7日 13:42:56
I don't know that it's particularly American. It's not the kind of thing that people say naturally (see "Tsk tsk") but a word meant to call to mind a non-verbal, spontaneous cry.
sudanglo (プロフィールを表示) 2011年6月7日 14:46:39
So more than an expression of emotion like 'yuk' for revulsion it is perhaps an imitation of sound, the causes for the cry, being various, maybe shock, surprise, fear, or seeing something repellent.