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I went with [livejournal.com profile] maaseru to South Keys today to browse at Chapter's. Yes, I bought a book - The Firefly French/English Visual Dictionary which is unutterably cool. It has words for things I didn't know in English, like muntin. Does everyone here know what a muntin is? Gad. I see them all the time. Didn't even know it had a word. In French it is petit montant. Who knew?

Then there's a picture of something I would have called long johns, which is identified in French as combinaison, a word I know. But in English they call it a 'union suit', a phrase I don't recall ever hearing. Chambers calls long johns "underpants with long legs", which means the upper part is missing, and they don't have 'union suit'. Merriam-Webster says long johns means 'long underwear' (which begs the issue of whether it has sleeves and a top part), while Cambridge online has no listing for long johns, but only long underwear, which then says 'Long underwear (also long johns) is warm, tight-fitting underwear reaching to the feet and hands,' explicitly including the upper part and sleeves. So who the heck uses the phrase "union suit", which is in none of these dictionaries online?

Wikipedia came to my rescue: a union suit is a 19th century version of long johns created in Utica, New York, which isn't far away from here, but culturally different - and, it seems, linguistically different as well.

I do love dictionaries.

After Chapters, [livejournal.com profile] maaseru and I went to Cotton Ginny, and discovered they've closed up, with a sign on the door (beside all the SALE signs) saying that they've been closed down for failure to pay the rent.

Damn.

Date: 2009-04-06 09:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
It isn't so much the distance - Toronto must be about the same and it seems close to Ottawa. It's the barriers: political (i.e., there's the Canada/US border), the difficulty of crossing the St. Lawrence (you have to go over one of only a few bridges, or find a bus that goes that way via Toronto, or take a train from Montreal), the cultural ties (I don't know anyone from Albany, or anyone with family in Albany, or anything remotely like that), and the incentive (why would a person want to go to Albany?)

As a matter of fact, I have been to Albany, for a science fiction convention. And I had a good time. But it certainly didn't seem close in any way. I might as well have been in Seattle or Madison, culturally speaking.

Date: 2009-04-07 05:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coalboy.livejournal.com
I was just using Albany as a distance point - it's not truly New England. Not far enough north in NY, and anyway, true New England starts at the VT-NY border & goes east.

Date: 2009-04-07 06:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I'm never really sure what "New England" means so I never use the phrase. It's like the English "Midlands" - I know what it is, I know roughly where it is, but I don't understand it enough to be specific, so I avoid embarrassing myself by not mentioning it.

And in any case, it seems very far away. Ten hours by bus or train? Thereabouts. Fun to visit, but not somewhere to visit often.

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