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16 Jan 2003, 02:56
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#1
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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Harry Potter 5 coming Jun 21
LONDON (AP) - More Muggles mania is expected after J.K. Rowling's publishers announced that her fifth book about wide-eyed junior wizard Harry Potter will be published in Britain, the United States and several other countries on June 21.
Much anticipated, and somewhat delayed, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" is 768 pages long, and by word count one-third longer than its predecessor, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," published in 2000.
That's just about all that was revealed in a joint statement Wednesday from Britain's Bloomsbury Publishers and Scholastic Children's Books in the United States. Details of Harry's latest adventure remain as secret as the whereabouts of Diagon Alley, where Harry famously buys his wizard supplies.
But young fans were delighted.
"I am so excited -- it has been much too long since the last one," said 10-year-old Phillip Weekes, who heard the news as he came out of his primary school near Bishop's Stortford, 30 miles north of London. "I'll buy it as soon as it comes out."
"Cool," said his friend, Alexandra Ball, 11. "I am dying to know what's in it."
The plot remains a mystery, but the publisher did reveal how the book begins: "The hottest day of the summer so far was drawing to a close and a drowsy silence lay over the large, square houses of Privet Drive. ...The only person left outside was a teenage boy who was lying flat on his back in a flowerbed outside number four."
And youngsters will have a few months to ponder what Hogwarts headmaster Albus Dumbledore means when he tells Harry, some pages on, "It is time ... for me to tell you what I should have told you five years ago, Harry. Please sit down. I am going to tell you everything."'
Rowling's books have served as rebuttals to those who predict the death of reading. Kids anticipate a new Potter the way teenagers once hurried out to buy Beatles records.
Fans have pestered book sellers and obsessed on Web sites about the next installment. Hunger for news about Potter V drove an American collector to pay more than $45,000 last month for a card full of clues about the plot that contained 93 words, including "Ron," "broom" and "sacked."
Kids aren't alone in celebrating Wednesday's news. Publishers, too, are elated. The industry endured its slowest holiday season in years, with many complaining about the lack of a "must-have" book to get shoppers in stores. Few books are more "must-have" than a Harry Potter story.
"It's an emotional lift, something to drive business and put books back in the news," said Carl Lennertz, publisher and program director of BookSense, a national marketing campaign for indepedent bookstores in the United States.
Some fans may have to squint through the "Order of Phoenix." One reason for all those pages is that publishers have used a smaller type. "The last book was pretty chunky, and we wanted to prevent this one being too big," said Bloomsbury spokeswoman Rosamund de la Hey.
When the book failed to make it into print last year, as expected, there was speculation that Rowling -- now one of Britain's richest women -- was suffering from writer's block. She denied it, but the book has taken far longer to complete than its predecessors, published every year from 1997.
With readers eager to hear about Harry's meetings with monsters and Muggles (non-magic people), and his fast-moving games of quidditch (a sort of aerial hockey played on flying broomsticks), booksellers now anticipate another bonanza. After all, fans stood in line at bookstores to be first to buy previous volumes.
"With the amount of interest and excitement surrounding Harry Potter, we expect the interest in advance reservations to be enormous," said Lesley Miles of book chain Waterstone's. "We know Harry's fans can't wait to get a copy of the new volume." In Britain, it is possible to reserve books in advance.
Rowling's four published titles have sold an estimated 192 million copies worldwide in hard and soft cover, and the books have been published in at least 55 languages and distributed in more than 200 countries. The first two books have been adapted into hit movies.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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16 Jan 2003, 02:59
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#2
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Snake of the Sand
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Florida, USA
Posts: 1,500
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I work in part-time in a bookstore, and this announcement breaks my heart. It was so great seeing the disappointment in people's eyes when we told them we didn't know when it was coming out..
Now I'll either have to lie or tell them "only in hte uk. we have to wait 4 months."
of course, thta last bit is still lying, but hey, it's slightly different from "we have no idea"
__________________
I poke badgers with spoons.
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16 Jan 2003, 03:02
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#3
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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Quote:
Originally posted by Sandsnake
I work in part-time in a bookstore, and this announcement breaks my heart. It was so great seeing the disappointment in people's eyes when we told them we didn't know when it was coming out..
Now I'll either have to lie or tell them "only in hte uk. we have to wait 4 months."
of course, thta last bit is still lying, but hey, it's slightly different from "we have no idea"
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Is it fun being evil?
I've always wondered.
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16 Jan 2003, 03:39
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#4
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Airvatar
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: westport
Posts: 620
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thats on assload of txt you have produced.
Shame its about something so trivial.
__________________
I'll never give a damn about my bad reputation.
#phnx
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16 Jan 2003, 04:17
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#5
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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Quote:
Originally posted by Nofutcha
thats on assload of txt you have produced.
Shame its about something so trivial.
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The miracle of cut and paste.
And Trivial posts seem to do better than serious posts on GD
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16 Jan 2003, 21:37
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#6
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Angry Young Man
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Mister Cacciatore's down on Sullivan Street
Posts: 7,518
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fookin eh
i wish they didnt get carried away with those ****ting films. this book should have came out last year. this summer should be book 6 for **** sake
__________________
Believe in me, cause i don't believe in anything
And i wanna be someone, to believe, to believe in
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16 Jan 2003, 21:43
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#7
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Alcoholic
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Pub
Posts: 208
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I am, disturbingly, a fan of the books, and will buy it as soon as i can get it.
__________________
<KaneED-> i'm so homosexual
<Ahriman> i didn't know they were shemales until i f*cked them...
If you can't win an argument without using insults you have lost the argument already
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16 Jan 2003, 21:45
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#8
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It was a Stupid Dream
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Winchester, UK
Posts: 2,077
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becky talked about this today
i was ready to slit my wrists
it was a case of "SERIOUSLY, I LOVE YOU, BUT I DONT CARE!"
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16 Jan 2003, 21:51
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#9
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finnish pokèmon
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Who cares?
Posts: 280
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Quote:
Originally posted by Nixjim
Is it fun being evil?
I've always wondered.
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Yes.
And I intend to avoid the book.
__________________
We often think that when we have completed our study of one, we know all about two, because two is 'one and one'. We forget that we have still to make a study of 'and'.
Quote:
Originally posted by JonnyBGood
We enjoy sucking the fun out of the boards. It's a competition.
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16 Jan 2003, 21:53
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#10
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Mr. Blobby
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Belgium
Posts: 8,271
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I saw the second movie. It wasn't too bad
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16 Jan 2003, 21:55
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#11
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Henry Kelly
Join Date: Apr 2000
Posts: 7,374
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Quote:
Originally posted by Leshy
I saw the second movie
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HAHAHAHAHAHA,
HAHAHA
OH MERCY
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA, HAHA, Ha
Yours Faithfully,
Pablissimo
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16 Jan 2003, 22:01
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#12
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Guest
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I can't stfu-ing believe it was on the news here...On the news...frigging...they must have nothing else to report here gah!
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16 Jan 2003, 22:03
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#13
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Henry Kelly
Join Date: Apr 2000
Posts: 7,374
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Quote:
Originally posted by Asper
I can't stfu-ing believe it was on the news here...On the news...frigging...they must have nothing else to report here gah!
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You don't happen to live in Scotland do you? They actually, actually had 'a bloke who owns a dalek' on their national news as opposed to 'something which mattered'
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16 Jan 2003, 22:38
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#14
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Angry Young Man
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Mister Cacciatore's down on Sullivan Street
Posts: 7,518
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indeed pab. In scotland, normally every item is a cat up the tree story. it might as well be a goss mag, rather than a news broadcast. This country is boring, and ****, and a total dead end. If i am to not end up like my family, i have to become only the 4th descendant ever to leave this country for good.
__________________
Believe in me, cause i don't believe in anything
And i wanna be someone, to believe, to believe in
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17 Jan 2003, 00:09
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#15
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One of the Originals
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Where?
Posts: 36
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Quote:
Originally posted by Zither
I am, disturbingly, a fan of the books, and will buy it as soon as i can get it.
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__________________
pEAce out!
Jesus reigns.
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17 Jan 2003, 01:41
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#16
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Para Keet
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Scotland
Posts: 96
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Quote:
Originally posted by Deffeh
fookin eh
i wish they didnt get carried away with those ****ting films. this book should have came out last year. this summer should be book 6 for **** sake
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Oh and remember that Ms. Rowling is pregnant, so it's going to be another good couple of years before the next one as she'll have a little one to look after. Mwahaahaha.
__________________
[23:46] <Theamion> i still love you tho
[23:47] <Theamion> you mad scottish bint
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17 Jan 2003, 01:45
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#17
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Happy
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Canada eh
Posts: 4,793
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wonder if she'll name her kid after hte characters in the book
lol
anywyas.. i've avoided the whole 'harry potter' thing.. never seen the movies.. never read the books. my sister has a few books and has seen the first movie.. but she doesn't sound to enthusiastic about it.
__________________
Where ever you go, there you are.
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17 Jan 2003, 01:55
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#18
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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People tell me I would be a great Hagrid.
I just tell them I can't fake a British accent, but after reading the stories finally this fall, I can see what they meant.
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17 Jan 2003, 01:59
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#19
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Guest
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The Harry Potter books and films are Gay.
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17 Jan 2003, 02:10
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#20
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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Quote:
Originally posted by Dace
The Harry Potter books and films are Gay.
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Gay
\Gay\, a. [Compar. Gayer; superl. Gayest.] [F. gai, perhaps fr. OHG. g?hi swift, rapid, G. g["a]h, j["a]h, steep, hasty; or cf. OHG. w?hi beatiful, good. Cf. Jay.] 1. Excited with merriment; manifesting sportiveness or delight; inspiring delight; livery; merry.
Yes, they are pretty good at that.
Rowlings is a very talented writer with a great imagination.
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17 Jan 2003, 02:12
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#21
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Guest
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A third meaning to the word "Gay" has been developed.
According to this new meaning it is a bad thing to be described as "Gay".
You stupid person you.
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17 Jan 2003, 02:27
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#22
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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Quote:
Originally posted by Dace
A third meaning to the word "Gay" has been developed.
According to this new meaning it is a bad thing to be described as "Gay".
You stupid person you.
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I'm starting a move to reclaim the wonderful word " GAY " from those who have perverted its historic and true meaning.
Thus I refuse to accept your new meaning as the one you intended.
I'm so
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17 Jan 2003, 02:36
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#23
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Guest
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Quote:
Originally posted by Nixjim
I'm so :cool:
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And by :cool: you mean Gay yeah?!
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17 Jan 2003, 04:34
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#24
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: I hate you all
Posts: 718
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The talking 'wizzad' had pissed me off, Discworld did that in 1988.
__________________
I admit it, i'm a [TiT]
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17 Jan 2003, 04:39
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#25
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Commander
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 404
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Quote:
Originally posted by Dace
And by you mean Gay yeah?!
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Jealous muggle?
If by Gay you mean , and are using the definition above, then yea.
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17 Jan 2003, 04:39
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#26
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The Twilight of the Gods
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 23,481
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Quote:
Originally posted by Nixjim
\Gay\, a. [Compar. Gayer; superl. Gayest.] [F. gai, perhaps fr. OHG. g?hi swift, rapid, G. g["a]h, j["a]h, steep, hasty; or cf. OHG. w?hi beatiful, good. Cf. Jay.] 1. Excited with merriment; manifesting sportiveness or delight; inspiring delight; livery; merry.
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1. a. Of persons, their attributes and actions: Full of or disposed to joy and mirth; manifesting or characterized by joyous mirth; light-hearted, exuberantly cheerful, sportive, merry.
b. Of a horse: Lively, prancing. [So in Fr.] rare1.
c. With implied sense of depreciation: Airy, off-hand.
d. In poetry: Applied to women, as a conventional epithet of praise. Obs. (Cf. FREE a. 3.)
e. the gay science: a rendering of gai saber, the Provençal name for the art of poetry,
f. Forward, impertinent, too free in conduct, over-familiar; usu. in phr. to get gay. U.S. slang
g. Of a dog's tail: carried high or erect.
2. a. Addicted to social pleasures and dissipations. Often euphemistically: Of loose or immoral life. Esp. in gay dog, a man given to revelling or self-indulgence; gay Lothario: see LOTHARIO.
b. Hence, in slang use, of a woman: Leading an immoral life, living by prostitution
c. Of a person: homosexual. Of a place: frequented by homosexuals. slang
3. Bright or lively-looking, esp. in colour; brilliant, showy.
4. Finely or showily dressed. Now rare
5. In immaterial sense: Brilliant, attractive, charming. Formerly also of reasonings, etc.: Specious, plausible
6.a. Brilliantly good; excellent, fine. Obs
b. ironically. Obs.
c. to have a gay mind: ‘to have a good mind’, to be very much inclined
7. Of quantity or amount. Pretty good, ‘tolerable’, ‘middling’. Sc. and north. Also GEY
8. dial. In good health; well, convalescent.
9. Comb., chiefly parasynthetic, as gay-coloured, -flowered, -hearted, -humoured, -looking, -seeming adjs.; gay cat U.S. slang, a young or inexperienced tramp; a hobo who accepts occasional work; (see also sense 2c); gay deceiver, (a) a deceitful rake (RAKE n.5); (b) pl. slang = FALSIES n. pl.; gay-feather U.S., the name of a plant (see quot.); Gay Gordons, (a) (see quot. 1925); (b) a Scottish dance popular in old-time and modern dancing; Gay Liberation (Front) orig. U.S., (a movement for) the liberation of homosexuals from social stigma and discrimination; also with lower-case initials, and abbrev. as Gay Lib (see LIB).
B. adv.
1. a. Brightly, showily = GAILY 1. b. In a gay mood, joyously = GAILY 2. Obs
2. Very. Also in weaker sense: Considerably, ‘pretty’. Frequent in dial. a gay few = a good few: see FEW 2d. Often written GEY.
3. Comb. Chiefly with pres. and pa. pples., as gay-beseen (see BESEE II), -careering, -chirping, -motleyed, -painted, -shifting, -smiling, -spent, -spotted, -throned
C. n. [the adj. used absol.]
1. A gay lady. Also, rarely of a man, a ‘gallant’. Obs.
2. a. Anything that looks gay or showy; an ornament; esp. one that is used to amuse a child. Now dial.
b. fig. A ‘toy’, childish amusement. Obs
3. A picture in a book. Now dial. (chiefly used by children).
4. slang (orig. U.S.). A homosexual, esp. a male homosexual. Cf. A 2c above
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17 Jan 2003, 20:32
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#27
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Guest
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Quote:
Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri
1. a. Of persons, their attributes and actions: Full of or disposed to joy and mirth; manifesting or characterized by joyous mirth; light-hearted, exuberantly cheerful, sportive, merry.
b. Of a horse: Lively, prancing. [So in Fr.] rare1.
c. With implied sense of depreciation: Airy, off-hand.
d. In poetry: Applied to women, as a conventional epithet of praise. Obs. (Cf. FREE a. 3.)
e. the gay science: a rendering of gai saber, the Provençal name for the art of poetry,
f. Forward, impertinent, too free in conduct, over-familiar; usu. in phr. to get gay. U.S. slang
g. Of a dog's tail: carried high or erect.
2. a. Addicted to social pleasures and dissipations. Often euphemistically: Of loose or immoral life. Esp. in gay dog, a man given to revelling or self-indulgence; gay Lothario: see LOTHARIO.
b. Hence, in slang use, of a woman: Leading an immoral life, living by prostitution
c. Of a person: homosexual. Of a place: frequented by homosexuals. slang
3. Bright or lively-looking, esp. in colour; brilliant, showy.
4. Finely or showily dressed. Now rare
5. In immaterial sense: Brilliant, attractive, charming. Formerly also of reasonings, etc.: Specious, plausible
6.a. Brilliantly good; excellent, fine. Obs
b. ironically. Obs.
c. to have a gay mind: ‘to have a good mind’, to be very much inclined
7. Of quantity or amount. Pretty good, ‘tolerable’, ‘middling’. Sc. and north. Also GEY
8. dial. In good health; well, convalescent.
9. Comb., chiefly parasynthetic, as gay-coloured, -flowered, -hearted, -humoured, -looking, -seeming adjs.; gay cat U.S. slang, a young or inexperienced tramp; a hobo who accepts occasional work; (see also sense 2c); gay deceiver, (a) a deceitful rake (RAKE n.5); (b) pl. slang = FALSIES n. pl.; gay-feather U.S., the name of a plant (see quot.); Gay Gordons, (a) (see quot. 1925); (b) a Scottish dance popular in old-time and modern dancing; Gay Liberation (Front) orig. U.S., (a movement for) the liberation of homosexuals from social stigma and discrimination; also with lower-case initials, and abbrev. as Gay Lib (see LIB).
B. adv.
1. a. Brightly, showily = GAILY 1. b. In a gay mood, joyously = GAILY 2. Obs
2. Very. Also in weaker sense: Considerably, ‘pretty’. Frequent in dial. a gay few = a good few: see FEW 2d. Often written GEY.
3. Comb. Chiefly with pres. and pa. pples., as gay-beseen (see BESEE II), -careering, -chirping, -motleyed, -painted, -shifting, -smiling, -spent, -spotted, -throned
C. n. [the adj. used absol.]
1. A gay lady. Also, rarely of a man, a ‘gallant’. Obs.
2. a. Anything that looks gay or showy; an ornament; esp. one that is used to amuse a child. Now dial.
b. fig. A ‘toy’, childish amusement. Obs
3. A picture in a book. Now dial. (chiefly used by children).
4. slang (orig. U.S.). A homosexual, esp. a male homosexual. Cf. A 2c above
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I'm not reading /\ All that
And I'm from the Netherlands. Used to hang out frequently on these boards, then I found a life...or maybe it found me :/
Saw someone was busy with the erasing-gum, since both of nicks were deleted heh.
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