Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Rasener Date: 08 Feb 09 - 06:05 AM LOL |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: GUEST,Doxy Date: 08 Feb 09 - 05:58 AM So far i'm happy to say I've never had a moments doubt although I didn't quite understand when he explained how father christmas gets into the house now we have central heating or why the tooth fairy didn't give my mum loads of money when her dentures fell out. But I guess that's because i'm just a girl and not as clever as him. he even tells me that's why I have to do the easy bit and play the melodeon while he does all the hard technical singing stuff. He's so considerate!!! |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Rasener Date: 07 Feb 09 - 04:44 PM Julia do you beleive everything that Derek tells you :-) Les |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Herga Kitty Date: 07 Feb 09 - 04:23 PM Hi Julia - I read all down the thread looking for one from you or Derek, and only just found it... Kitty |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: GUEST,Doxy Date: 07 Feb 09 - 04:17 PM It's always nice to have a mention on mudcat. Doxies are the historic equivalent of social workers. When those poor tired sailors came home from sea with work related stress problems they would visit the Doxies for a nice cup of tea and a chat and they came away feeling much better. Honest (thats' what Derek told me when we picked our name) They must have been good at what they did because some of them charged a lot of money for their services and the sailors seemed to keep going back!!! Doxy |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: MartinRyan Date: 03 Feb 09 - 05:41 AM Over here, of course, those curious little dogs are "dachsies" pronounced with a long A. No fear of confusion - which is just as well... Regards |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: David C. Carter Date: 03 Feb 09 - 05:34 AM In his book-A Confederacy of Dunces-John Kennedy Toole has his main character Ignatius J.Reilly refer to his girlfriend as a 'Doxy'.Her answer to everything is "sex". Aside from that,it is a great book.IMHO. Cheers David Carter |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: mrwassail Date: 02 Feb 09 - 08:04 PM A little german dog dachshund |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Nick E Date: 02 Feb 09 - 07:59 PM My Weiner (Dog) has long hairs on it! I have just the one, Matilda is her name. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: olddude Date: 02 Feb 09 - 07:01 PM to me, a Weiner dog is a doxy i have 3 |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: robomatic Date: 02 Feb 09 - 11:41 AM Not to be confused with 'Sockdologer'! |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Joe_F Date: 01 Feb 09 - 08:55 PM "Fier" (also spelled "pheare" etc.), according to the OED, could mean a mate of either sex, *or* a spouse. It appears in a terrific speech, probably written by Shakespeare, in _The Two Noble Kinsman_. Speaking of Burns, one might note in The Jolly Beggars, With the ready trick and fable, Round we wander all the day, And at night in barn and stable Hug our doxies in the hay. A fig for those by law protected! etc. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: open mike Date: 01 Feb 09 - 03:58 PM i had only heard this word as a description of Dachshund dogs as kat said..http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/dachshund.htm |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: dick greenhaus Date: 01 Feb 09 - 02:56 PM Well, apropos of practically nothing, my second sailboat (an 11-foot Cape Cod dinghy) was named DOXY---it sounded sporty, offended nobody and fit on a small (but well-shaped) transom. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 01 Feb 09 - 12:56 PM As for the expression round heeled - A Round-Heeled Woman: My Late-Life Adventures in Sex and Romance by Jane Juska, 2007. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 01 Feb 09 - 12:33 PM All the oblique definitions of "doxy" remind me of a line I use in the introduction when singing "Easy Rider": "An Easy Rider is a gentleman who lives on the earnings of young ladies who are no better than they should be." Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: GUEST,Ken Brock Date: 01 Feb 09 - 09:26 AM The term is used in the book for the circa 1956 musical The Music Man, when salesman Charlie Cowell finds he has been tricked by Marian Paroo into missing his train. He calls her a "round-heeled doxy fizz-gig". The show begins July 4, 1912 (incidentally, first day of use of the 48 satr US flag - perhaps to save expense on scenery?), and has numerous terms archaic by 1956, especially in "Rock Island" and "Trouble". |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: MartinRyan Date: 01 Feb 09 - 08:27 AM The Penguin Dictionary of Historical Slang , abridged from Partridge, covers most of the bases mentioned in this thread. I particularly like his first definition: in mid-C.16-18 cant, a beggar's trull, a female beggar. Elsewhere, luckily, he defines trull as "a harlot" Regards |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Rasener Date: 01 Feb 09 - 08:17 AM Well I am sure Derek & Julia would know AKA Trim Rig & A Doxy |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: GUEST,Dani Date: 01 Feb 09 - 08:08 AM "I don't think it necessarily means she's "loose", it just means that she could be if she wanted to be." I think we need to pick up our drinks and move over to the Middle Age Dating thread. ; ) Dani |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: GUEST,eggbucland Date: 24 Jan 07 - 04:45 AM doxy is this weird lasy who i think fancys chickens because she sticks them up her top and that is sick and she carrys all th stuff shes nicked and as she walks she nits and she tricks the chickens. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: beadie Date: 08 Mar 02 - 10:46 AM Here, and all this time I thought that the term "doxy" was one of endearment used by owners of short-legged, feisty, ground-animal hunting canines for their companions. In short (pardon the pun), its a weiner dog! |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Wilfried Schaum Date: 08 Mar 02 - 07:40 AM If I read the conversations of Pvtes Mulvaney, Ortheris et al. right, Mr Red's observations about "bint" are correct. In these and other texts "bint" always denotes the indigene unmarried young female with no objections to any moral deviations implied in the use of the word. Speaking with todays veterans of HM's Services, they used and understood the term in the sense described above. Wilfried |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Mr Red Date: 07 Mar 02 - 03:53 PM bint and wench are good earthy words for "woman" in black country dielect. Nothing unseemly about them per se. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Dicho (Frank Staplin) Date: 07 Mar 02 - 12:23 PM Untidy and slovenly is another definition for slattern (and the one in the OED). Webster's adds the meaning of slut or prostitute. Is it used in that sense in the British Isles as well? |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Trevor Date: 07 Mar 02 - 11:49 AM I like 'slattern'. In fact I think I did once like a slattern! |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Tone d' F Date: 07 Mar 02 - 05:13 AM A woman of negotiable virtue |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Wilfried Schaum Date: 07 Mar 02 - 02:51 AM A male equivalent for "doxy" might be nicknamed "doxy", too. Reference can be found here |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Dicho (Frank Staplin) Date: 07 Mar 02 - 12:08 AM I seem to remember "bint' from Kipling- or other author who wrote about the East. It means daughter in Arabic, and has appeared in English writings since 1855 (OED). It therefore was picked up in the old Empire-building days. It is easy to see how it got applied to "availables" by British troops , company employees and civil servants. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: katlaughing Date: 07 Mar 02 - 12:06 AM Interesting book there, Dicho. A quick search at www.bookfinder shows two orignals priced at $350.00 each, but it looks as though there is a 1981 facsimile, with new intro, for an affordable $23-24! Our library sale starts this Saturday. I shall have to brave the masses and see if I can find anything comparable. Ya never know what someone's old auntie might have had hidden away all of these years! |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: JennieG Date: 06 Mar 02 - 11:44 PM I have just found out that leman is Middle English from the 13th century - jeez that's a long time ago! Cheers JennieG |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Wilfried Schaum Date: 06 Mar 02 - 10:12 AM "Rubbing yourself with a dock leaf gives you relief from pain, and the same could be said for a doxy." What a relief, when she gave you the claps! (Sailor's lament). In the etymological discussion, however, it seems that a certain change of meaning might be observed. It semms to hit the girls most of the time. In High German the term Dirne meant a girl in former times, now a prostitute. In the Dialects of Northern Germany, however, (Deern) and Bavaria (Dirndl, diminutive) the original meaning is preserved. In France the same happened to poor fille, the daughter. To discern a daughter from a woman of a disputable character she is now spoken of as a jeune fille. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Mr Red Date: 06 Mar 02 - 10:02 AM don't have time to check if it is said but Stan Hugill referred to them in the context of loose or whoring women on the dockside. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: The Walrus at work Date: 06 Mar 02 - 09:03 AM Murray, The term "bint" in English well predates WW2, coming back with British troops from India. Dicho, Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue? A great book (I just wish I could find my copy) JennieG, I don't know what today's term for an enthusiastic amateur in the matress stakes (except, perhaps "slapper" which is considered insulting), but at one point it seems that "Whores" were the amateurs (the professionals being "harlots"), (see "Moll Flanders", where she describes herself as wife to one brother and whore to the other). Regards Walrus |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: rich-joy Date: 06 Mar 02 - 04:57 AM To return to JennieG and Dicho's 04Mar02 postings (well, I've been away!!) and the term "LEMAN" : Don't some versions of that Three Ravens ballad ("down a-down, hey down a-down" refrain) read : "may God grant every gentleman, such hawks, such hounds and such leman" ??? No clues to marital status though ... Cheers! R-J |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Murray MacLeod Date: 06 Mar 02 - 12:54 AM Spelt "fier" by Robert Burns, in the world's best known song "Auld Lang Syne". "So here's a hand my trusty fier, and gie's a hand o' thine". (Frequently misquoted as "my trusty friend", including in the DigiTrad) Murray |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: katlaughing Date: 06 Mar 02 - 12:52 AM If she strummed on his trumpet They called her a strumpet, For dollops of goo she's a trollop! Oops, Pooka, back to you...my well just ran dry! LOL!!! |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Dicho (Frank Staplin) Date: 05 Mar 02 - 09:04 PM Fere= phere= companion, consort or mate (OED). Obsolete. Not a word I know anything about. |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: The Pooka Date: 05 Mar 02 - 08:54 PM katlaughing, yer at it again, & I'm pookchortling. The *strumming of a trumpet*? / heehee/ Well, shofar sho good. Will you relate further, then? :) |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Mr Red Date: 05 Mar 02 - 08:11 PM What about the old word "phere" I've seen it on two occasions and both were memorial plaques. You would expect the word "wife" or "spouse" unless the person referred to was a "paramour". I read it as "mistress" but only in context. Literal meaning is dear or loved one. Cookham Parish Church was one. Just across from the ferry Pub - (Maidenhead FC every Thursday) |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: JennieG Date: 05 Mar 02 - 07:44 PM Great resource Dicho! Some of those old terms are wonderfully colourful; why is it that words today seems so much duller in comparison? I know that language is continually evolving but it doesn't seem to be as much...I don't know.....fun? What are the current terms for "enthusiastic amateurs" then? Cheers JennieG |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: katlaughing Date: 05 Mar 02 - 03:47 PM What a resource, Dicho! Doll was also in use in the Rocky Mountains. My dad's term of endearment for my big sister was "Super-doll." I still catch myself calling my girlfriends that, sometimes. I rather like the way trollop and strumpet roll off the tongue. Sounds like some sort of mix-up of a dollop of something and a strumming of a trumpet?**BG** |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Dicho (Frank Staplin) Date: 05 Mar 02 - 01:58 PM Jennie- "floozie" put my mind back in time over 50 years. My grandmother used he term. I think it is now becoming obsolete. McGrath- haven't heard "Dolly girl." Not used over here in America? KatL- yep, only see trollop and strumpet in books now. I remember prossie (ahem, as a general term!) And I just remembered my copy of "A Dictionary of Buckish Slang, University Wit and Pickpocket Eloquence (with...changes and improvements ...by a member of the Whiplash Club), 1811. (a "buck" is a debaucher). Here are some of its definitions : Doxies (dells)- She beggars, wenches, whores. Doll- Bartholomew doll- an over-drest woman, like one of the children's dolls at Bartholomew Fair. (to mill doll; to beat hemp at Bridewell or any other house of correction) [before Pol. Cor., doll was a common term in NY-NJ and region for a woman. Lady Abbess- The head-mistress of a brothel. Ace of spades- a widow. Ape leader- an old maid. Their punishment after death, for neglecting to increase and multiply, will be leading apes in hell. Arch doxy- the female equivalent of a leader, among canters or gypsies. (canter- thieves, beggars or gipsies; anyone using the canting lingo) Aunt- my aunt; a procuress or baud; a senior dell (doxy)who serves as instructress for the dells Beard splitter- a man much given to wenching [common Mexican slang for intercourse is "to wet the brush"] Bobtail- a loose woman To box the Jesuit and get Cock Roaches- to masturbate; a sea-term for a practice said to be common among Jesuits. Cold meat- a dead wife is the best cold meat in a man's house. Colt's Tooth- an old fellow who marries or keeps a young girl is said to have a colt's tooth. Convenient- a mistress. Cooler- a woman. Could go on- most interesting dictionary. Now to revive some of these colorful terms... |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Mark Ross Date: 05 Mar 02 - 12:04 PM The Oriental definition comes from my old friend Utah Phillips. Mark Ross |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: sledge Date: 05 Mar 02 - 12:01 PM In the song Radcliffe highway, you have the line' "a young Doxy came rolling up to me", it then goes on to describe how the Doxy fleeces the sailor of his change while serving drinks. I've read that it was common for serving girls in the less salubrious taverns, certianly those that catered to the needs of sailors, to supplement their income by resorting to prostitution and theft, for a window into that dsort of life read the excellent book the floating brothel. Sledge |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: Murray MacLeod Date: 05 Mar 02 - 11:31 AM Just speculating, but if "doxy" is indeed of Eastern origin, it might well have come back via soldiers returning from the Crusades, in the same way that "bint" was popularized as a slang word for a young unmarried girl by British soldiers returning from the Middle East after the Second World War. Murray |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: katlaughing Date: 05 Mar 02 - 10:38 AM Over here, at least in my parent's generation, a trollop or strumpet would have negative conotations, thus so would doxy, esp. if we are equating it with prostitute, which gets shortened to "prossie." Except for the latter, they all seem to be old-fashioned words, which I think of in more use when my parents were growing up than now. The other word which comes to mind is "moll" as in a girlfriend of a mobster being known as a "gun moll." Not quite a prossie, but definitely a woman of loose morals in that she was unmarried and having sex with the guy.:-) |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 05 Mar 02 - 10:32 AM Well, Les Barker has told us all about the problems dachshunds have in their love life." (And Les is in the States at present I think - don't miss him if you have a chance.
But I can't agree about doxy having "a ring of contempt" -In fcat I think it normally carries a touch of appreciation. True enough, a doxy, (however defined) "might threaten another woman's marriage". But the more likely term to be applied to her in this context would be something like trollop or strumpet.
(What a strange spell checker Inhave - it doesn't think there is such a word as strumpet. Or doxy for that matter. No problem with trollop though.)
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Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: The Pooka Date: 05 Mar 02 - 01:24 AM katstilllaughing - *LOL* - heeheeheehee - Bravo! But a Doxy with the Poxy, boys, I tell yez to beware. I gotta stick with the Dockside interpretation above, and the lyrics - Wrap me up in me oilskins and jumper, No more on the Dox I'll be seen.... btw there's a Rex Stout/Nero Wolfe novel "Death of a Doxy." / Just thought I'd throw that in, for the literary scholars... |
Subject: RE: What is a 'Doxy'? From: katlaughing Date: 05 Mar 02 - 01:17 AM Okay, seriously, going by that clue, Murray, I did find this in a glossary for the Beggar's Opera: "Doxies: a "doxy" is a prostitute or mistress. Here the term is used in reference to the women of a Turkish harem." Might also note, Dachshunds are often referred to as Dachsies.:-) |
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