The author, Peter B. Kyne mentions in his book, soldiers, sailors and dogs, New York: HC Kinsey & Co., 1936, which is obviously a series of expressions, which probably originated in the Spanish / American war and could have survived until the beginning of American involvement War in Kyne obviously had some military experience or knowledge. occur in his book, some of fictional stories in America and France during World War II. Kyne such usesExpressions such as:
"Bluebird", apparently a reference to a person who took the service for a period of time left and then again in the army. The connotation could be here with the instinct of a homing Bluebird to the performance the same year, the nest to be made for years. Light makes no mention of the word.
"Bob," a disgrace discharge from service. To receive a "Bob" or "Bob" was receiving a dishonorable discharge. "Bobtail" is the Indian Wars slang for a dishonorable discharge."Her Bobtail back by post, O'Reilly went to hell."
Paul Dickson's book, War Slang ... read: "bobtailed. dishonorably discharged, to remove from practice (" hopping ") gives the ratio of the discharge papers that honor. Dickson, Paul Guerra. ... Slang Pocket Books, 1994, page 44, also the ' act of cutting the discharge section labeled under the banner of "no character." Rickey, forty miles a day on beans and hay.
Elting "A Dictionary of Soldier Talk 'featuresthe definition of "bobtailed Relief Bobtail (old army). A dismissal from service under less than honorable. It is not a dishonorable discharge, but the next thing there. The term derives from the practice of cutting off the last section of the form discharge, the character dischargee covered. During World War II, called "discharge without honor."
In his article "Slang of the American Expeditionary Force in Europe, 1917-1919 (American Speech, 1972) Joathan Lighteridentified:
- Bobtail dismissed as dishonest, a printout of the SU Army late 19th Century.
Paul Dickson's "War Slang" Bobtail hotel has an army disciplinary barracks. "
"Soldier to run" was to be an exemplary soldier. To "control" what?
"Fogie"-a-Service stripes. Light makes no mention of the word.
Elting also "goth, goth, Fogie (all services). A word whose origin and history would probably be very interesting ifexactly known. The first form, the civilian and half of the 18th Century is "fogram" or a pensioner, an old fuddyduddy. First (late 18th and early 19th century, British and American). A soldier elderly or disabled, as a garrison of soldiers. Second (19 th century, with some ruins; pay U.S.) Longevity, the increase in pay for length of service. "I have another goth next month, but my wife is already impersonating him." Even pay as goth, goth pa pay both owl and barn owl(With variants) are obsolete.
Dickson War Slang "offers a similar, much shorter, defined without regard to time or the background. Easier said than goth or goth was a bonus of longevity and the petty civil war, "goth".
At the end of 1960, a "Fogie" a further step is due to your longevity. It may be that they were awarded the excesses of the service bandwidth for strips of service for longevity.
ACorrespondence in the fact that his father was in SU Army 1910-1940 and that during that time the army slang for "whore" was "biscuit-shooter." Nothing is known about the origin of this expression.
They are all Army Spanish-American War and expressions, none of them survive until the first world war? Although the author Kyne uses these terms in connection with the Spanish-American War veteran serving in the U.S. Army during World War I, I've never seen thisTerms in any other American war fonts used.
REFERENCES
Dickson, Paul. War slang. NY: Pocket Books, 1994
Elting, A Dictionary of Soldier Talk.
Kyne, Peter B. soldiers, sailors and dogs. NY: HC Kinsey & Co., 1936.
Lighter, Jonathan. "Slang of the American Expeditionary Forces in Europe, 1917-1919. American Speech, 1972.
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