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To: epicure who wrote (67219)2/25/2005 9:23:42 AM
From: Mac Con Ulaidh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71178
 
Foof as in foo-foo. I think the diamonds and trips to the doggie salon are part of that. And those painted nails. Painted toe-nails are a definite sign of a leaning towards foo-foo. Like girly-girl with expendable income.



To: epicure who wrote (67219)2/25/2005 4:16:01 PM
From: Jacques Chitte  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 71178
 
It's a fine old word at the end of a long and dignified tenure in our language. Scholars largely agree that it derives from the Medieval French foufie or foufe (accent aigu on the end there) meaning "obsessed with one's hair", literally "more wig than judge". The word may be related to the ancient Saxon fufg, which might best be translated "dorky, lightweight, overstyled". A vulgar form of fufg, fufge is recognized; it denotes effeminacy, sexual confusion. This may be why Chaucer referred to "dogges in dragge".



To: epicure who wrote (67219)2/25/2005 8:46:01 PM
From: JF Quinnelly  Respond to of 71178
 
Choosie and LRR have done an outstanding job of explicating foof-dog.

The part they left out is that you can use them for target practice when the dump runs low on rats.