[Facts] Huckleberry
Did Mark Twain make up Huckleberry?
Replies
People not from the south have probably not heard of it but, the huckleberry is actually a purplish-black berry that grows on a short stocky bush in the south. The berries are really really sour and not very edible. They are called huckleberries or hartleberries
They are not very tasty by themself but they make a great cobbler.
Yup, I read that it was called hurtleberries in England...
and then us Americans mispronounced it to be huckleberries! :)
and then us Americans mispronounced it to be huckleberries! :)
Are you still considering Huckleberry as a name for your next child, Andrea? :)
Whether or not Mark Twain created a unique name out of a slang expression, there is at least one baby name book on the market which "legitimizes" the name for modern-day use -- *The Penguin Classic Baby Name Book: 2,000 Names from the World's Great Literature*, by Grace Hamlin. You'll find an entry in there for "Huckleberry" as a choice for a boy's name.
-- Nanaea
Whether or not Mark Twain created a unique name out of a slang expression, there is at least one baby name book on the market which "legitimizes" the name for modern-day use -- *The Penguin Classic Baby Name Book: 2,000 Names from the World's Great Literature*, by Grace Hamlin. You'll find an entry in there for "Huckleberry" as a choice for a boy's name.
-- Nanaea
Thanks, Nan. Yeah, I just love it!
:)
:)
Tongue-moles
According to the venerable Oxford English Dictionary the first written record of Huckleberry appeared in 1670. THe word is thought to be a corruption of Hurtleberry [from ‘heurtes (F), small Azure balls, tearmed (in Heraldry) hurts on men, and tongue-moles on women’].
Anagrams include "Blurry cheek"
According to the venerable Oxford English Dictionary the first written record of Huckleberry appeared in 1670. THe word is thought to be a corruption of Hurtleberry [from ‘heurtes (F), small Azure balls, tearmed (in Heraldry) hurts on men, and tongue-moles on women’].
Anagrams include "Blurry cheek"
Ew! ew! ew!
Ew!
Ew!
hehe :P
Well, as a name, maybe. But it is a kind of berry, so he didn't make up the word.
Thanks.
:)
:)
Try this:
http://www.word-detective.com/back-w.html
I know it wasn't *exactly* what you were asking;), but I thought it was pretty interesting.
Melissa
http://www.word-detective.com/back-w.html
I know it wasn't *exactly* what you were asking;), but I thought it was pretty interesting.
Melissa
THanks, Melissa! These meanings are nicer than yours, Pavlos...
"I'm your huckleberry" in a story about the Old West. Looking up the term in a dictionary, I found that in slang it meant "special man for the job" around 1880
"I'm your huckleberry" in a story about the Old West. Looking up the term in a dictionary, I found that in slang it meant "special man for the job" around 1880