catskillz
Saturday 7th March 2009 12:14pm [Edited]
Merseyside
3,395 posts
I actually pride myself on having a fairly big vocabulary. This is partly due to the battery-powered dictionary someone bought me, about 12 years ago. As for not knowing the meaning of certain words, one incident always sticks out for me. I was in an I.T. lesson, when I was 16, and my teacher kept saying "scenario". I looked around the class, and realised I was the only person that didn't know the meaning of the word. I felt like a right idiot, because I'd been hearing the word for years, but had just never asked anyone what it meant.
By the way, as well as having a pretty big vocabulary of English words, I also know a lot about Ebonics, which, if you didn't know, is African American slang. Most people think these words are just the meaningless creations of kids, but some words actually have quite an interesting etymology. One such word is "Mack". Most of you will be familiar with the word from the awful Mark Morrison song, from about 10 years ago, called 'Return of the Mack', but did you know that the word is actually a shortened version of Mackerel, as in fish? The reason for this, is that male Mackerels will often act as a matchmaker, for other males, guiding would-be female mates to them. The sight of this phenomenon led some African Americans to compare these Mackerels to Pimps, and soon the word was in commen use, when referring to Pimps. In fact, there was a Blaxploitation film, starring Richard Pryor, made in the early '70s, about Pimps, which was called 'The Mack'. Anyway, as Pimps were often admired in poor black neighbourhoods, for having money and expensive clothes, the word "Mack" soon became seen as a complement, which is why these days, it's mostly used to describe a bloke who is popular with women.