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Terms Which Have Disappeared

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
I love arguing with religious types when they maintain that employing the usual G.D or J.C. is "using the Lord's name in vain." And I think my argument is solid.

The prohibition set forth in Exodus and Leviticus set forth in what we call "the Ten Commandments" refers to a name rendered in Hebrew by means of the tetragrammaton. Not any English word or name, as English as a language didn't exist at the time the commandment was reportedly given. "God" isn't a name- it's a title, perhaps a job description... but not a name. To "use the name of the Lord in vain" would mandate a knowledge of Hebrew that I wish I possess... but I really don't. Usually rendered as יהוה, the actual pronunciation of the tetragrammaton is a matter of speculation based upon a transliteration.

Then I offer this analogy: if your name is Jorge, your name may be seen as the rendition in English of George. However, "Jorge" is still your name- it isn't still "George," whether you're in Yonkers or Buenos Aires. The prohibition set forth in Exodus and Leviticus set forth in what we call "the Ten Commandments" prohibits use of a name- not the English language rendition of a name.

And as an alternative argument I point out that "using the name of the Lord in vain" is about taking an oath without proper intent- not verbalizing a curse.

I would think if there is a need to curse using a name,
why not use your name instead & be done with it. :cool:
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,771
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
I love arguing with religious types when they maintain that employing the usual G.D or J.C. is "using the Lord's name in vain." And I think my argument is solid.

The prohibition set forth in Exodus and Leviticus set forth in what we call "the Ten Commandments" refers to a name rendered in Hebrew by means of the tetragrammaton. Not any English word or name, as English as a language didn't exist at the time the commandment was reportedly given. "God" isn't a name- it's a title, perhaps a job description... but not a name. To "use the name of the Lord in vain" would mandate a knowledge of Hebrew that I wish I possess... but I really don't. Usually rendered as יהוה, the actual pronunciation of the tetragrammaton is a matter of speculation based upon a transliteration.

Then I offer this analogy: if your name is Jorge, your name may be seen as the rendition in English of George. However, "Jorge" is still your name- it isn't still "George," whether you're in Yonkers or Buenos Aires. The prohibition set forth in Exodus and Leviticus set forth in what we call "the Ten Commandments" prohibits use of a name- not the English language rendition of a name.

And as an alternative argument I point out that "using the name of the Lord in vain" is about taking an oath without proper intent- not verbalizing a curse.

Exactly so. The tetragrammaton is usually translated into English as "Jehovah," and appears a couple of times in the King James transaltion in that form, where it's usually printed in small capitals to denote its ineffable nature, but in most cases, wherever you see "LORD" in small caps in the KJV Old Testament, it's the tetragrammaton that appeared in the original Hebrew. Some translations, notably the American Standard Version of 1901 use "Jehovah" thruout the Old Testament.

Hebrew was and is written without vowels -- a complicated system of notation is used to represent what vowels should be used -- so the original true pronunciation of the tetragrammaton is lost. So it's impossible for us today to take the actual, genuine "Lord's Name" in vain, because we don't even know how to pronounce it properly.
 

Capesofwrath

Practically Family
Messages
780
Location
Somewhere on Earth
Exactly so. The tetragrammaton is usually translated into English as "Jehovah," and appears a couple of times in the King James transaltion in that form, where it's usually printed in small capitals to denote its ineffable nature, but in most cases, wherever you see "LORD" in small caps in the KJV Old Testament, it's the tetragrammaton that appeared in the original Hebrew. Some translations, notably the American Standard Version of 1901 use "Jehovah" thruout the Old Testament.

Hebrew was and is written without vowels -- a complicated system of notation is used to represent what vowels should be used -- so the original true pronunciation of the tetragrammaton is lost. So it's impossible for us today to take the actual, genuine "Lord's Name" in vain, because we don't even know how to pronounce it properly.

You say I took the name in vain
I don't even know the name
But if I did, well really, what's it to you?
There's a blaze of light
In every word
It doesn't matter which you heard
The holy or the broken Hallelujah

L Cohen.
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,178
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
I love arguing with religious types when they maintain that employing the usual G.D or J.C. is "using the Lord's name in vain." And I think my argument is solid.

The prohibition set forth in Exodus and Leviticus set forth in what we call "the Ten Commandments" refers to a name rendered in Hebrew by means of the tetragrammaton. Not any English word or name, as English as a language didn't exist at the time the commandment was reportedly given. "God" isn't a name- it's a title, perhaps a job description... but not a name. To "use the name of the Lord in vain" would mandate a knowledge of Hebrew that I wish I possess... but I really don't. Usually rendered as יהוה, the actual pronunciation of the tetragrammaton is a matter of speculation based upon a transliteration.

Then I offer this analogy: if your name is Jorge, your name may be seen as the rendition in English of George. However, "Jorge" is still your name- it isn't still "George," whether you're in Yonkers or Buenos Aires. The prohibition set forth in Exodus and Leviticus set forth in what we call "the Ten Commandments" prohibits use of a name- not the English language rendition of a name.

And as an alternative argument I point out that "using the name of the Lord in vain" is about taking an oath without proper intent- not verbalizing a curse.

There are many words/names used for describing the many aspects of the one God as believed by Jews. 'Hashem' is a common one. Another more common Hebrew word is pronounced 'adonoi' (ah-doe-NOY) which is represented in text by two of the letter 'yuud,' together. The letter loosely resembles an apostrophe. If pronounced the way it is spelled, it would sound like two "y's," but in is pronounced 'adonoi.'

Both are substitutes for 'the name that must not be spoken.'
 
Messages
10,941
Location
My mother's basement
There are numerous euphemisms for dying, some of which might be lost on younger people. "Bought the farm" comes to mind, as does "kicked the bucket."

Youngsters might deduce the meaning from context, but would probably be at a loss as to either's origin.
 

skydog757

A-List Customer
Messages
465
Location
Thumb Area, Michigan
I miss the terms "Pier Six brawl" or "It's a regular Donnybrook" or even "Free for all" when referring to a fierce clash of groups/mobs (normally confined to fist fights).
 

p51

One Too Many
Messages
1,119
Location
Well behind the front lines!
I miss the terms "Pier Six brawl" or "It's a regular Donnybrook" or even "Free for all" when referring to a fierce clash of groups/mobs (normally confined to fist fights).
The last of the three is the only one I've ever heard before.
But then again, I was raised in the Deep South. Most fights were called, "A good butt-whoopin'"
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,771
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Yep, popularized by Dodger announcer Red Barber, who called his autobiography "Rhubarb In The Catbird Seat," said "catbird seat" being a position of advantage -- another Barberism which was very popular in the Era but has since faded away.

Barber's surviving broadcasts are a gold mine of colorful language. I heard him describe one particular game as being "as tight as a new pair of shoes on a rainy day," and immediately mourned for all the thousands of games he broadcast over the years for which no recordings exist, and all the brilliant bits of language we'll never get to enjoy.

Around here, a rowdy fight is known as a "knock-down drag-out."
 

skydog757

A-List Customer
Messages
465
Location
Thumb Area, Michigan
[QUOTE="LizzieMaine, post: 2022278, member: 1381"Around here, a rowdy fight is known as a "knock-down drag-out."[/QUOTE]

I'd forgotten that one. I also remembered "brouhaha", which I never really cared for although it was a nice set-up word for the Firesign Theatre. A "brouhaha" wasn't specifically a fight, it was more of a "hubbub".
 

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