Loansome: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{a|plainenglish|}}{{d|Loansome|/ˈləʊnsəm/|adj|}}Having the characteristics of a [[loan]]. Thus, unhip: fusty; old-fashioned. Luddite. Stone-age. | {{a|plainenglish|}} | ||
{{quote|{{script|Nuncle}}: ’Tis none so mincey as a Farrington chop<br> | |||
And nowt so [[loansome]] as a [[fixed rate swap]].<br>}} | |||
{{d|Loansome|/ˈləʊnsəm/|adj|}}Having the characteristics of a [[loan]]. Thus, unhip: fusty; old-fashioned. Luddite. Stone-age. | |||
There is some irony in Nuncle’s wry remark, because while achingly cool and edgy swaps are, of course, powered by loans. But only a boffin would say this in polite company. | |||
''Compare'': [[Swappish]]. | ''Compare'': [[Swappish]]. |
Revision as of 19:07, 11 December 2023
Towards more picturesque speech™
|
Nuncle: ’Tis none so mincey as a Farrington chop
And nowt so loansome as a fixed rate swap.
Loansome
/ˈləʊnsəm/ (adj.)
Having the characteristics of a loan. Thus, unhip: fusty; old-fashioned. Luddite. Stone-age.
There is some irony in Nuncle’s wry remark, because while achingly cool and edgy swaps are, of course, powered by loans. But only a boffin would say this in polite company.
Compare: Swappish.
Origin: archaic, possibly coined by Otto Büchstein, in Die Schweizer Heulsuse.