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To: E who wrote (2083)3/11/2002 1:14:56 PM
From: Tom Clarke  Respond to of 21057
 
Neat site! I am happy to finally know how arms akimbo came to be an expression. It always niggled at me as to what the heck akimbo meant, and why it was just arms that went akimbo.



To: E who wrote (2083)3/11/2002 1:22:18 PM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
I'm glad they mentioned absquatulate. Never heard of it before, can't wait for the chance to use it. From dictionary.com.

ab·squat·u·late Pronunciation Key (b-skwch-lt)
intr.v. Midwestern & Western U.S. ab·squat·u·lat·ed, ab·squat·u·lat·ing, ab·squat·u·lates

To depart in a hurry; abscond: “Your horse has absquatulated!” (Robert M. Bird).
To die.
To argue.

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[Mock-Latinate formation, purporting to mean “to go off and squat elsewhere”.]
Regional Note: In the 19th century, the vibrant energy of American English appeared in the use of Latin affixes to create jocular pseudo-Latin “learned” words. There is a precedent for this in the language of Shakespeare, whose plays contain scores of made-up Latinate words. Midwestern and Western U.S. absquatulate has a prefix ab-, “away from,” and a suffix -ate, “to act upon in a specified manner,” affixed to a nonexistent base form -squatul-, probably suggested by squat. Hence the whimsical absquatulate, “to squat away from.” Another such coinage is Northern busticate, which joins bust with -icate by analogy with verbs like medicate. Southern argufy joins argue to a redundant -fy, “to make; cause to become.” Today, these creations have an old-fashioned and rustic flavor curiously at odds with their elegance. They are kept alive in regions of the United States where change is slow. For example, Appalachian speech is characterized by the frequent use of words such as recollect, aggravate, and oblige.