Giles: Helping out with the dishes makes me feel useful. Dawn: Wanna clean out the garage with us Saturday? You could feel indispensable.

'Dirty Girls'


Spike's Bitches 22: You've got Angel breath  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


Beverly - Mar 22, 2005 6:28:31 pm PST #8663 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

And I'm jealous of both Lee and Deena.

Also jealous of the Trudy and the Parker.

-t, I was distressed and saddened to read your news when I caught up here tonight. I'm so sorry for your loss.

Call me a stick in the mud, if you like, I prefer a formal name that can be nicked. Beverly is impossible to nick, though it can be dimmed to Bev. My favorite aunt called me Bevvie, but she's the only one who ever did. I miss her--and no, not just for the dim. But, if you don't give a child a formal name, plus a middle name, how is s/he going to know when s/he is on the perilously thin ice of parental patience? "Firstname Middlename Lastname! Don't make me tell you again! Stop that right now!"

I would name a kid Fredrick and call him "Frodo".

Better than Fredo. IJS, look what happened to Fredo--nobody wants to grow up to be the family screwup.


Lee - Mar 22, 2005 6:43:03 pm PST #8664 of 10001
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Hey, I got the wireless to work! Yay.

Of course, it is now past time to go to bed.


aurelia - Mar 22, 2005 6:47:54 pm PST #8665 of 10001
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story. Tell me a story.

Are they dysfunctional bears? Does one drink a lot?

Well one is a dancer... (I knew someone would catch that).

They could be Binkley and Milo. Or she could do like the Madwoman of Chaillot (the Countess Aurelia, natch) and change their names each hour.


§ ita § - Mar 22, 2005 6:49:23 pm PST #8666 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Beverly is impossible to nick, though it can be dimmed to Bev.

Aren't diminutives nicknames? How do you define nickname?


Beverly - Mar 22, 2005 7:04:38 pm PST #8667 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

A dim is a shortening or lifting of the name or part of the name. A nick can be anything: Gipper, Flash, Cranky, Curly (my bald father's nick was Curly), etc. Usually referring to an event the nicked might rather forget, or to an outstanding physical attribute or lack of one, etc. And often, nicks use or allude to part of the name--"Speed" for Speedle on CSI:Miami, for example. Smitty for someone named Smith.

Sparks for the communications officer is a nick, as is Lou for a lieutenant.

Where as Miranda or Miriam is dimmed to Mindy, Mimi, or Randi/y, Elizabeth to Eliza, Liza, Liz, Beth, Betty, Bess, Betsy, etc.


§ ita § - Mar 22, 2005 7:11:28 pm PST #8668 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

A nick can be anything: Gipper, Flash, Cranky, Curly (my bald father's nick was Curly)

So it's not that Beverly can or can't be nicked, then? I mean, if it's not a shortening or a lifting, no name is ever nicked. Just dimmed.

I've never encountered that semantic distinction before. My father's nicknamed Moore because he has a brother Les(ton). My cousin's nicknamed Wenty because Wentworth was too long. My mother's nicknamed Del because her middle name is Delores. My aunt is called Ann because that's what they'd meant to name her in the first place.

All nicknames to me, except, sometimes for Ann, since I'm not sure she always knew her real name.


Beverly - Mar 22, 2005 7:12:22 pm PST #8669 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Hey, I got the wireless to work! Yay.

Oh good. 'Cause my laptop is wireless, but I can't beat the cable OR dialup hookup process/number thingy out of Roadrunner, and there's no wireless at my MIL's, Weymouth or the beach condo. Stoopid Roadrunner.


DavidS - Mar 22, 2005 7:44:57 pm PST #8670 of 10001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Beverly is impossible to nick

'Verily?


§ ita § - Mar 22, 2005 7:54:29 pm PST #8671 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

'Verily?

No, see, you've dimmed Beverly. Verily's no more a nick than Bev is.

Of course, every name is impossible to nick, since nicking isn't something you do do names.


Connie Neil - Mar 22, 2005 8:41:38 pm PST #8672 of 10001
brillig

Well, he's home, pretty much in the same shape as when I left him this morning. Another episode of the same problem that we're trying to get solved.

On to bed.