ortega76
Practically Family
- Messages
- 804
- Location
- South Suburbs, Chicago
I was described as "old school" the other day at work but in the context of someone who works hard and has high standards. I'll take that as a compliment.
Marc Chevalier said:Here's one difference between the old and new usages of the term:
-- Old usage: "He's of the old school."
-- New usage: "He's old school."
See the difference? Hear the difference? He's no longer from a school. Today, he is a school!
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Haversack said:I don't know if there is any cross-fertilization going on, but to describe someone as "fly" or being a "fly man" is something of a compliment in the Glaswegian argot and has been so since at least the 1930s. It means a particularly crafty or devious person.
Haversack.
Quigley Brown said:Can square dance calling be considered rap?
nightandthecity said:I think I read somewhere that there is a direct line from West Indian quadrille dance calling to Jamaican toasting to rap......and another line running from the tradition of improvised mock sermons in England.
everything comes from somewhere. Everything has roots.