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Terms Which Have Disappeared

LizzieMaine

Bartender
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33,753
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
There are some pretty dark imaginings of what Charlie Brown and company would be like today if they'd aged in real time. Probably too dark to post here, but they're out there for those who want to know.

(JPEG Image, 259 × 194 pixels).jpg
 
Messages
12,969
Location
Germany
I can't say as though I've used the term in awhile, but how would it be most commonly used by a German? I dare say in common American parlance very few would use (or even know of) the term as a synonym for many or multiple. Most know it as part of a motor.

Yeah, synonym for "many"/"multiple", here.
 

Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
That is one of the definitions in English for "manifold": "Many and various." But it's rarely used in that context, and most Americans would apply the other definition, that being "A pipe or chamber branching into several openings."

I think in American writings one would actually be more likely to encounter "...many fold..." though even that is a bit archaic.
 
Messages
10,939
Location
My mother's basement
We wore dungarees growing up, not jeans.

The people a generation and two ahead of me used “dungarees” for blue jeans. And “brogans” for heavy work shoes. A quick search shows that a brogan is a specific style of ankle-high shoe, but the adults around me used the term more expansively. Pretty much any work shoe was a brogan in their book.
 
Messages
12,017
Location
East of Los Angeles
...And “brogans” for heavy work shoes. A quick search shows that a brogan is a specific style of ankle-high shoe, but the adults around me used the term more expansively. Pretty much any work shoe was a brogan in their book.
Right. Traditional brogans resembled what we might refer to today as a "Chukka boot", except a bit higher up the ankle and sometimes had a taller heel.
 

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