There seems to be some confusion over the meaning of “obsolete”. It doesn’t mean something doesn’t exist anymore. It still exists, probably as older people would still use it.
To “trip over” something or other literally, or figuratively as in making a mistake, became obsolete last century as it was taken over by “trip up” and “trip on” but it still existed.
It’s only its use without a transitive that didn’t exist. And probably never did in print outside the publication of the diary. That proves the creativity of the author and his or her creative use of an expression that was obsolete by the 90s.
Trip Over for Trip Up
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Originally posted by Ms Diddles View Post
Oh, Smalltown Boy is a great track and Jimmy comes across as a lovely wee guy.
That's why I was a little surprised that you (apparently) held him in such low esteem!
Yeah, I tend not to stray into diary-land as a rule, but for the record I'm in "The Barretts didnae dae it" camp.
Best get outta here!
You've tripped over now, Ms D! Do you realise this amounts to accusing the saintly, conscience-stricken Mike Barrett of telling porkies??
Any time you'd care to join me going down the garden to eat worms, just gae us a shout, bonnie lassie.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by caz View PostHa ha, Ms D! No beef with Jimmy Somerville, I can assure you. Smalltown Boy is one of my all-time favourite tracks.
By the way, you are brave to come here without signing off:
'The Barretts dunnit.'
People might think you haven't yet had your mind made up for you.
Love,
Caz
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That's why I was a little surprised that you (apparently) held him in such low esteem!
Yeah, I tend not to stray into diary-land as a rule, but for the record I'm in "The Barretts didnae dae it" camp.
Best get outta here!
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Ha ha, Ms D! No beef with Jimmy Somerville, I can assure you. Smalltown Boy is one of my all-time favourite tracks.
By the way, you are brave to come here without signing off:
'The Barretts dunnit.'
People might think you haven't yet had your mind made up for you.
Love,
Caz
X
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Originally posted by caz View Post
I wouldn't put anything past Jimmy So-vile.
Love,
Caz
X
Got it now!!
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post"Yes, Lombro claimed that 'trip over' is an archaic predecessor of 'trip up,' but what you seem to be failing to grasp is that he produced no evidence to show that this is the case." - R. J. Palmer
Certainly, I'd be happy to.
In Post #3.
Lombro made his claims in post #1 and post #2.
Immediately, in Post #3 you wrote:
"Another question for Anne Graham then, Lombro2, by anyone who still believes her fingerprints are all over the diary...."
The obvious implication is that Lombro's claims were somehow valid and thus Anne's alleged authorship of the diary was somehow being undermined.
I then challenged the validity of Lombro's claims.
You then came back and apparently agree with my concerns, but no one would know it, because you buried your agreement in a harangue and claimed my questions were obvious.
The diary depicts a man who struggles to write poetry. He even complains about his struggles. Why can't the clumsy line simply be an example of that?
Or, why can't it simply be an example of Anne's occasional use of a malaprop?
Another question Palmer might like to ask Anne is whether the word 'instance' in the very first sentence of the typescript was one of her occasional malaprops, which she recognised as an error and corrected to 'instant' when copying it into Mike's doctored photo album, between 1st and 12th April 1992.
When you come up with evidence of Lombro's claims, maybe I'll feel obliged to ask your question to Anne, but I fail to see how it would be relevant.
Even if you proved the idiom was Victorian--and you haven't--outside of quantum physics, time is linear, so anachronisms only work in one direction.
Always nice to hear from you, Caz.
I get the decided feeling that if I said the sun came up in the east, you'd argue the point, so I'll leave you and Owl and Tom and Jay and Lombro to solve this most perplexing of mysteries.
The trouble with Palmer's analogy is that he is confusing his admirably unshakeable faith in Mike Barrett with reality.
I can clearly be no help in finding the answer you want to hear.
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"Yes, Lombro claimed that 'trip over' is an archaic predecessor of 'trip up,' but what you seem to be failing to grasp is that he produced no evidence to show that this is the case." - R. J. Palmer
Originally posted by caz View PostPerhaps Palmer could indicate where I failed to grasp this.
In Post #3.
Lombro made his claims in post #1 and post #2.
Immediately, in Post #3 you wrote:
"Another question for Anne Graham then, Lombro2, by anyone who still believes her fingerprints are all over the diary...."
The obvious implication is that Lombro's claims were somehow valid and thus Anne's alleged authorship of the diary was somehow being undermined.
I then challenged the validity of Lombro's claims.
You then came back and apparently agree with my concerns, but no one would know it, because you buried your agreement in a harangue and claimed my questions were obvious.
Then why didn't you ask them before suggesting we quiz Anne Graham about it?
In short: business as usual.
The diary depicts a man who struggles to write poetry. He even complains about his struggles. Why can't the clumsy line simply be an example of that?
Or, why can't it simply be an example of Anne's occasional use of a malaprop?
When you come up with evidence of Lombro's claims, maybe I'll feel obliged to ask your question to Anne, but I fail to see how it would be relevant.
Even if you proved the idiom was Victorian--and you haven't--outside of quantum physics, time is linear, so anachronisms only work in one direction.
Always nice to hear from you, Caz.
I get the decided feeling that if I said the sun came up in the east, you'd argue the point, so I'll leave you and Owl and Tom and Jay and Lombro to solve this most perplexing of mysteries.
I can clearly be no help in finding the answer you want to hear.
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I'm not happy about all this Sir Jim lark. Are we suggesting Saville faked the diary?
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
Actually, I'm not even remotely confused, Caz, except my usual confusion as to why you and Tom and Lombro think you've made a valid observation.
The question in this case is whether 'trip up' - as in make a mistake - is too modern for Maybrick and, if so, does this mean the Barretts would have dodged a bullet if they had created the text, by not thinking to write 'trip up'?
Yes, Lombro claimed that 'trip over' is an archaic predecessor of 'trip up,' but what you seem to be failing to grasp is that he produced no evidence to show that this is the case.
He's already conceded that he misread the one example he did give, and that Keely's meaning was 'stumble upon' (as in 'stumble upon the truth') rather than 'trip up.'
With that, you and Lombro and Tom are left without any peas in your peashooter.
No one has shown that the phrasing is Victorian, nor that the phrase wouldn't have been just as jarring to the Victorians' ears as it is to yours and Tom's and Lombro's.
I could just as easily claim--with a similar lack of evidence--that 'trip over' was an archaic version of 'trip up' dating to the 16th Century, and thus Maybrick's use of it in the diary is a jarring error, but I'm not quite that desperate.
And not that it matters one bit, but how exactly do you know that you have correctly grasped the hoaxer's meaning?
The initial entry reads:
Sir Jim trip over
fear
have it near
redeem it near
case
poste haste
It's poetry. The line separations don't always signal the end of a thought, and the grammar can be clipped.
Why couldn't Barrett have meant 'Sir Jim [will] trip over fear?'
In a different context, 'trip over fear' could mean 'trip due to fear', but it doesn't really work any better in the diary than Palmer's examples.
As Lombro observed, it's the finalised version that counts, which Palmer chose to ignore because it shoots peas directly at his funny little theory about tripping over fear:
He believes I will trip over,
but I have no fear.
For I could not possibly
redeem it here.
The meaning looks crystal clear to me: 'Sir Jim' has no fear of tripping up, screwing up or falling into a trap, by redeeming something connected with the latest murder, because he's currently 'here' [in Liverpool] and too far away.
Sorry Caz, there is literally nothing to see here.Last edited by caz; 04-24-2024, 04:00 PM.
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
I could just as easily claim--with a similar lack of evidence--that 'trip over' was an archaic version of 'trip up' dating to the 16th Century, and thus Maybrick's use of it in the diary is a jarring error, but I'm not quite that desperate.
And not that it matters one bit, but how exactly do you know that you have correctly grasped the hoaxer's meaning?
The initial entry reads:
Sir Jim trip over
fear
have it near
redeem it near
case
poste haste
It's poetry. The line separations don't always signal the end of a thought, and the grammar can be clipped.
Why couldn't Barrett have meant 'Sir Jim [will] trip over fear?'
It's a legitimate reading of the text, and five minutes of looking turns up modern writers expressing this same thought:
A poet named Katrina-Ariel has piece called "Fireflies in My Heart."
I trip over fear as I dare
To follow the breeze
I run through the trees
Another blogger writes:
"I started to trip over fear, and fell into confidence."
The New Hope Community Church advertises a sermon based on Isaiah 8:14:
"Many run towards trouble and trip over fear and confusion..."
Sorry Caz, there is literally nothing to see here.
He believes I will trip over
But I have no fear
What do you make of that?
It’s still intransitive no matter what he’s talking about. It’s not archaic. It’s original. Like “one off instance” would be to a Victorian. But at least it would be plausibly original to a Victorian.
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Originally posted by caz View Post
Love,
Caz
X
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
Sorry Caz, there is literally nothing to see here.
See ya, wouldn't wanna be ya.
Pedanticaz
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Originally posted by caz View PostI think Palmer got himself a wee bit confused over the usage in the diary of 'trip over' - which is all that matters here:
'He believes I will screw up
but I have no fear
Yes, Lombro claimed that 'trip over' is an archaic predecessor of 'trip up,' but what you seem to be failing to grasp is that he produced no evidence to show that this is the case.
He's already conceded that he misread the one example he did give, and that Keely's meaning was 'stumble upon' (as in 'stumble upon the truth') rather than 'trip up.'
With that, you and Lombro and Tom are left without any peas in your peashooter.
No one has shown that the phrasing is Victorian, nor that the phrase wouldn't have been just as jarring to the Victorians' ears as it is to yours and Tom's and Lombro's.
I could just as easily claim--with a similar lack of evidence--that 'trip over' was an archaic version of 'trip up' dating to the 16th Century, and thus Maybrick's use of it in the diary is a jarring error, but I'm not quite that desperate.
And not that it matters one bit, but how exactly do you know that you have correctly grasped the hoaxer's meaning?
The initial entry reads:
Sir Jim trip over
fear
have it near
redeem it near
case
poste haste
It's poetry. The line separations don't always signal the end of a thought, and the grammar can be clipped.
Why couldn't Barrett have meant 'Sir Jim [will] trip over fear?'
It's a legitimate reading of the text, and five minutes of looking turns up modern writers expressing this same thought:
A poet named Katrina-Ariel has piece called "Fireflies in My Heart."
I trip over fear as I dare
To follow the breeze
I run through the trees
Another blogger writes:
"I started to trip over fear, and fell into confidence."
The New Hope Community Church advertises a sermon based on Isaiah 8:14:
"Many run towards trouble and trip over fear and confusion..."
Sorry Caz, there is literally nothing to see here.
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