He used the word clip, when describing what he would do to the ears, in this letter. Is this evidence that he used a pair of siccors in his mutilations?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Clip
Collapse
X
-
Hello LC.
Thanks for that. I made this thread because I was not aware that there was any ambiguity about the word clip.Not according to my dictionary anyway. A knife cut is simply not a clip. The action of a clip results in something being cut.But the action is completely different. One would need the appropriate implement to clip.Which is why I thought scissors.
Even if the word was fairly standard Victorian use, it still did not imply a knife cut. Thanks Q.
Comment
-
From the Oxford English Dictionary...
clip, verb
1a. To cut with scissors or shears, often with the notion of making trim and tidy... 1b. To cut or snip (a part) away, off, out, from.
Note that definition 1b doesn't require or reference any specific implement.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostFrom the Oxford English Dictionary...
clip, verb
1a. To cut with scissors or shears, often with the notion of making trim and tidy... 1b. To cut or snip (a part) away, off, out, from.
Note that definition 1b doesn't require or reference any specific implement.
Best regards GLast edited by Guest; 11-03-2009, 12:07 AM.
Comment
-
I'm familiar with the saying 'i'll give you a clip around the ear'.. meaning a light tap-smack to the side of the head/ear. To me its always been a victorian sounding phrase (and London/cockney at that). I think to 'clip' refers to the quickness and slightness of the process rather than the implement involved. I think a 'clip' can certainly be done with a knife.
Paul
Comment
-
Originally posted by swagman View Post'clip' is also defined as a short/quick event (ie a clip of film). I think that is what 'jack' is referring to..Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostI don't think "clip" would have been used in that way in 1888, Swag. The first recorded instance of such usage, according to the Oxford dictionary, was in 1958... as you'd expect, it needed the advent of motion pictures and/or television for that sense of "clip" to emerge.
paul
Comment
Comment