An old boss used to say "spiffy" or "snippy" in the same vein. Previously, I'd only heard snippy used as a way to say short, or rude.Does a well-dressed person still look "snazzy"?
An old boss used to say "spiffy" or "snippy" in the same vein. Previously, I'd only heard snippy used as a way to say short, or rude.Does a well-dressed person still look "snazzy"?
Milquetoast - a wonderful expression that seems all but done for.
Did English-speaking people call condoms really "Johnnys"??
Caspar Milquetoast, "The Timid Soul," by H. T. Webster. Pretty much the only thing worth reading in the anemic Herald-Tribune comic section.
My mother calls them "French Safes."
Only seeing it here, I seem to remember it, but am not sure. Was it still going in the late '60s / 70s? I could also be "remembering" it from all the books and articles I've read on cartoons.
Webster died in 1952, but he'd left enough of a backlog to keep his cartoons running in the Herald-Tribune until 1953. A hardcover collection of "The Best of H. T. Webster" appeared later that year, and sold quite well, with copies common in libraries and on the second-hand book market.
Webster had several other series besides "The Timid Soul," and some of the titles became catchphrases of the day, especially "Life's Darkest Moment" and "The Thrill That Comes Once In A Lifetime," both of which were single-panel cartoons casting a rose-colored glow over scenes from a late-19th Century childhood. A lot of the "good old days" imagery seen in the Era can be traced to these cartoons. They were pleasant and nostalgic and inoffensive in a way that suited the Herald-Tribune's middle-aged readership.
Another single-panel comic (with a Sunday strip introduced later) was "Our Boarding House," by a number of artists, which was still running when I was growing up. It featured the iconic Major Hoople, who even got a shout-out in Kerouac's "On the Road."
Since air-conditioning done went and got invented, nobody sits on their porch like that anymore.
I have only the vaguest memories of some newspaper comic strips from when I was little but I'm sure that's where I saw them. There was one about people on a streetcar that I think was the Toonerville Trolley. The artwork was very similar to the comic strip above. There were a couple of single panel comics that also appeared daily in the local paper that I remember but I don't remember the titles. They seemed more adult oriented. In fact, none of the comics were at all childish.
Some I remember vividly, like Bringing up Father, Mutt & Jeff, Dick Tracy and my favorite, Blondie. I rather identified with Dagwood. It's been a long time since he caught the streetcar to work and took naps in the stockroom. I also liked Gasoline Alley, Moon Mullins and Prince Valiant. All first-class literature.
You don't hear "gussied up" meaning "dressed up" or "upscaled" much anymore as in "she got all 'gussied up' for the party."
I guess I'm the oddball here. I use that expression myself, and not "ironically," either.
And there remains the great mystery of "Dagwood": Just how many puppies does Daisy have?