Stanley Doble
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Oldest use I have seen of groovy was a detective story ca.1890. It was used to describe someone as obsessive. "She thought about it too much and got groovy on the subject".
Of course. If you find some swell artifact from the 60's, it's groovy.I still say it when it fits.
Probably "redonkulous."
See, this is also what I consider a sad tale of 2012. Anything beyond a tweet or text is now considered a "dissertation." I see a sentence or two as brevity.
"Word" dates back to the 1970s. I used it a lot in NYC at that time. It's not a descriptor but an affirmation of agreement.
Snazzy and hot-pups have their place as well.
Along with its intensifiers, swell-o and swell-o-rooney.
...I say bitchen, as in "that's bitchen", quite a bit, because my mother used it all the time while I was growing up [huh]
So we seem to have two issues here. Brevity, and word choice for brevity. We've always had words, or rather, a word useful as an explanation, way before 2012, as so many posts have demonstrated. A couple of sentences, or a mere word, have been used for decades. Are we now trying to lay at the feet of either 2012 or technology this 'sudden' adoptation of one-word exclamations?
So we seem to have two issues here. Brevity, and word choice for brevity. We've always had words, or rather, a word useful as an explanation, way before 2012, as so many posts have demonstrated. A couple of sentences, or a mere word, have been used for decades. Are we now trying to lay at the feet of either 2012 or technology this 'sudden' adoptation of one-word exclamations?
It's more the lack of real expressiveness in the words that are used, as far as I'm concerned. Slang in the era had infinite shadings of meaning -- something could be swell, nifty, swanky, ritzy, spiffy, peachy, solid, snazzy, snarky, top-drawer, first-rate, or grand -- and all of those terms meant something slighty different. When something is "awesome!" that really doesn't tell me anything. Is Mount Rushmore "awesome?" Is a bowl of chicken noodle soup "awesome?" It doesn't really seem to *mean* anything, at least not to my hearing -- it's the "you know" of intensifiers, a placeholder word thrown in because the speaker doesn't seem to have anything else to say.
I remember when a cousin came to visit one summer in the early 70's.
He used "boss" - had never heard it used in southern GA except for a Mustang Boss. I liked it ever since.
I think the 'valley girl' abuse of words such as 'awesome' is what I can object to, in whatever small way I will devote any of my time to objecting to things such as this.