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Usenet Posted 22 years ago
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Buggerlugs

In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the rear seat of his car, and saying "come on, buggerlugs".

That took me back: my parents used this as an affectionate nickname, but I hadn't heard it for 40 or more years.
I associate the usage with my father (born in Manitoba in 1917) rather than my mother (born in Lancashire in 1921), so I suspect it's left- rather than right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.)
Any knowledge of regional distribution?

Cheers, Harvey
Ottawa/Toronto/Edmonton for 30 years;
Southern England for the past 22 years.
(for e-mail, change harvey.news to harvey.van)
  

Top answer

[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... right-pondian. [/nq] An elderly Scottish academic surprised me considerably by calling me this at a very early stage of our acquaintance.

  • [nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ...
  • right-pondian.
  • [/nq] An elderly Scottish academic surprised me considerably by calling me this at a very early stage of our acquaintance.
  • I had never heard it before, wasn't sure I'd heard it correctly and was more than a little anxious about what it meant, until I checked with others who told me I'd obviously made a hit with him as it was his normal term of affection.
  • But I've never heard anyone else use it.
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17 Answers
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
An elderly Scottish academic surprised me considerably by calling me this at a very early stage of our acquain
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
I heard it growing up on the right side of the pond. I've never come across it living on the left.

A
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
Incidentally, I always assumed (rightly or wrongly) it had something to do with ears, as in "lug 'oles."
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... Cheers, Harvey Ottawa/Toronto/Edmonton for 30 years; Southern England for the past 22 years. (for e-mail, change harvey.news to harvey.van)[/nq]
Heard it often when I was a kid (and later) in 1940s/1950s. NE England.

Regards,
LaurieF
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
My father (who was born and spent his childhood on the East coast of Canada, about a decade later than yours)
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... suspect it's left- rather than right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.)[/nq]
It's familiar to me in Right-pondia.
The dictionary of slang at
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[nq:1]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ("Fatboy Slim") was described as extracting his four-year-old from the ... right-pondian. (That tends to be confirmed by its apparent omission in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
Well known in 40s / 50s Lancashire. For many years I thought it was 'bug-a-lugs', never having seen it written
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[nq:2]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ... in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
[nq:1]Well known in 40s / 50s Lancashire. For many years I thought it was 'bug-a-lugs', never having seen it written ... gross or corpulent habit' from fusty + lug.('lug' in the sense of heavy or slow) Perhaps from buggy-lugs or bugs-in-lugs?[/nq]
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[nq:2]In an interview in today's Guardian, the DJ/musician Norman Cook ... in both OED1 and Collins.) Any knowledge of regional distribution?[/nq]
[nq:1]Well known in 40s / 50s Lancashire. For many years I thought it was 'bug-a-lugs', never having seen it written ... gross or corpulent habit' from fusty + lug.('lug' in the sense of heavy or slow) Perhaps from buggy-lugs or bugs-in-lugs?[/nq]
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[nq:2]Well known in 40s / 50s Lancashire. For many years ... sense of heavy or slow) Perhaps from buggy-lugs or bugs-in-lugs?[/nq]
[nq:1]I prefer "bug-a-lugs", since I don't think it's got anything to do with sodomy. A connection with insects and ears seems much more likely.[/nq]
I think so, too, and will modify my spelling.
Mike.

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