Talk:bloodynoun
Latest comment: 9 years ago by -sche
Century lemmatizes the alt form bloodnoun, which however seems to be so much rarer that it may not even meet CFI. I can find one citation:
- 2000, Jeffery Deaver, The Empty Chair: A Novel (→ISBN), page 119:
- You sit here at night, listen to the cicada and the bloodnouns—you know, the bullfrogs.
There is also this citation of unlcear meaning:
- 1894, Robert Blatchford, A Son of the Forge, page 84:
- […] but kape up yere pecker, an' if mesilf an' owld Blood 'n Ouns can assist yez the ivil a fear but we're the boys to thry.
This is the general exclamation:
- 1891, The Dear Little Shamrock, in Reilly's 400 / Judge's Library: A Monthly Magazine of Fun, number 24, page 24:
- An' shure, whin 'tis shpied by th' Amerikin aigle,
- Blood'nouns! but he'll choke himself scraitchin' the brogue.
As to the geographic distribution there are these references:
- Robert Hendrickson, The Facts on File Dictionary of American Regionalisms (2000, →ISBN), page 24: bloodnoun A bullfrog, chiefly in South Carolina. Also heard as bloody-noun.
- 1894 Transactions of the American Philological Association: A curious survival of this phrase appears in the name blood-nouns, sometimes bloody-nouns, applied by boys in the city of Washington some years ago, and I dare say now, to bull-frogs.