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Something Rhymes with Purple

Bazooka

Something Rhymes with Purple

Sony Music

Comedy, Arts, Education

4.82.6K Ratings

🗓️ 18 July 2023

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, we traverse the lexicon landscape of the Second World War, unearthing the hidden treasures of word origins. Join us as Susie & Gyles unveil the remarkable tales behind wartime vocabulary, and reveal the extraordinary evolution of words shaped by the tumultuous era. We love hearing from you, find us @SomethingRhymes on Twitter and Facebook, @SomethingRhymesWith on Instagram or you can email us on our NEW email address here: [email protected] Want even more purple, people? Join the Purple Plus Club by clicking the banner in Apple podcasts or head to purpleplusclub.com to listen on other platforms' Enjoy Susie’s Trio for the week: Niminy piminy: Feeble Scringe: To screw up the face Slapsauce: A glutton Gyles' poem this week was 'Slough' by John Betjeman Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough! It isn't fit for humans now, There isn't grass to graze a cow. Swarm over, Death! Come, bombs and blow to smithereens Those air -conditioned, bright canteens, Tinned fruit, tinned meat, tinned milk, tinned beans, Tinned minds, tinned breath. Mess up the mess they call a town- A house for ninety-seven down And once a week a half a crown For twenty years. And get that man with double chin Who'll always cheat and always win, Who washes his repulsive skin In women's tears: And smash his desk of polished oak And smash his hands so used to stroke And stop his boring dirty joke And make him yell. But spare the bald young clerks who add The profits of the stinking cad; It's not their fault that they are mad, They've tasted Hell. It's not their fault they do not know The birdsong from the radio, It's not their fault they often go To Maidenhead And talk of sport and makes of cars In various bogus-Tudor bars And daren't look up and see the stars But belch instead. In labour-saving homes, with care Their wives frizz out peroxide hair And dry it in synthetic air And paint their nails. Come, friendly bombs and fall on Slough To get it ready for the plough. The cabbages are coming now; The earth exhales. A Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts To bring your brand to life in this podcast, email [email protected] Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Oh hello, I'm Kathy Burke, host and bonafide grim reaper of the where there's a will there's

0:07.0

a wake podcast.

0:08.8

And I'm God S.K.T. here for all your ad read needs.

0:12.0

What we looking at today then Kathy?

0:13.5

Yes thank God you arrived.

0:15.0

Oh show on the road with autotrader, the brilliant podcast hosted by Alex Ligui that takes

0:21.4

famous faces on a personalised road trip, visiting the places that help shape them and hearing

0:26.1

other locations turn them into who they are today.

0:28.6

Yeah I was just about to say that.

0:30.6

Great minds Kathy.

0:31.6

Show on the road, listen and follow wherever you get your podcasts.

0:35.6

Hello and welcome to another episode of our podcast.

0:42.7

It's all about words and language and it features me, Jars Brownruth and my friend and in my

0:48.8

view the world's leading lexicographer Susie Dent.

0:52.8

How did you get into lexicography Susie?

0:56.0

I think I got into lexicography in the loosest sense when I went to work for Oxford University

1:01.9

Press OUP who are publishers of the Oxford dictionaries and the most amazing place really

1:10.3

with vast teams of people working on these dictionaries.

1:12.6

So I went there and worked on bilingual dictionaries, French and German, Spanish etc and then

1:18.1

came to English quite late but I think words found me a long time before then Jars.

1:24.2

I always as you know, stared at catch up bottles and anything with the printed word upon

1:29.6

it has always had some sort of magical allure for me and yeah right from one of my earliest

...

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