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Friday, March 25, 2016

Raunchy



Doug from Traverse City asked about the word raunchy. Originally, it meant sloppy and unkempt. It then came to mean bawdy and off-color. Most dictionaries declare that its origin is unknown. It first shows up in print in the 1930s, and it may have been Army-Air Corps slang—a reference to an improperly worn or cared-for uniform.

The word has a number of interesting synonyms and near-synonyms, a testimony to a sophomoric tendency to tell off-color jokes.

·    bawdy:  < Old French baud, licentious
·    lascivious: < Latin lascivia, licentious
·    obscene: < Latin obscenus, lewd
·    scatological: < Greek root skat-, dung
·    risqué: < French risqué, unsuitable
·    salacious: < Latin salax, lustful, “fond of leaping upon”
·    ribald: < Old French riber, to indulge in pleasure
·    licentious: < Latin licentia, license, in the sense of excessive permissiveness

Listen to Mike’s program in real time every Tuesday morning, 9:10 - 10:00 a.m. EST, by going to wtcmradio.com and clicking on Listen Now. You’ll also find about a month’s worth of podcasts there under The Ron Jolly Show.





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