tools

lindafowens lindafowens at netzero.net
Thu May 29 20:02:28 EDT 2003


Thanks, Nora, I keep getting more and more feedback on "mertilize" or
"murdalize".  What are often lacking in today's lazy speech are euphemisms
and innuendoes.  I grew up in a more sedate--or at least formal--perhaps
Victorian  (our teachers' mothers were real Victorian ladies)--era when many
people only hinted at things, or tried to cover up indelicacies.  My son
Greg is fascinated by this absurd behavior and is showing Guys and Dolls to
his classes at the boys' training school by way of illustration.  I used to
teach art at the prison  (for a year) and the F-word was used constantly,
except in my classes, at my request. I figured they needed a place in which
to practice good behavior, should they ever come up in front of a parole
board, and one guy actually thanked me.  Linda
----- Original Message -----
From: Nora Munoz <noraemunoz at yahoo.com>
To: lindafowens <lindafowens at netzero.net>; <fictionary at plover.com>
Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2003 10:31 AM
Subject: Re: tools


> I know it was used in Bugs Bunny (Why, I oughta!  I'll
> mertilize him, I'll squash him like a bug!), which I
> assume was getting it from old gansta flicks with
> James Cagney and such.  Perhaps they were just
> changing the words around so that we children wouldn't
> get the idea that they were actually going to murder
> someone.
> Nora
>
> --- lindafowens <lindafowens at netzero.net> wrote:
> > Hi, I was just at my grandson's house reading an old
> > compendium of Calvin and Hobbes when I came across
> > Spaceman Spiff's Mertilizer.  The only time I had
> > heard the word "mertilize" was once when my mother
> > threatened to mertilize us kids.  She's been dead a
> > long time, but when alive she was normally such a
> > pleasant person that I figured she wanted to murder
> > us kids for something horrible we'd done, but really
> > didn't want to murder us, so she made up the
> > euphemism--or it just slipped out.  Anyone ever
> > heard of it before?  The same cartoon strip had the
> > word GRONK! as a sound--we used to call a rather
> > schmoo-like teacher colleague by that nickname.  In
> > a further C&H strip there was a Frap-Ray, and in
> > another SPELUNK! was a frog pond sound  (I used to
> > explore caves, so I laughed). Linda
> >
>
>
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