Date: Sun, 3 Dec 1995 18:30:41 -0500
From: "Dennis R. Preston" preston[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]PILOT.MSU.EDU
Subject: Re: -head
I saw the Green Bay Packers play today and heard their fans, them, and
Wisconsonites (Wisconsonians?) in general referred to as 'cheeseheads.' One
of the fans in the stands had a hat shaped like a big wedge of cheese
(apparently a Swiss). I hadn't thought about Alice in Dairyland for a long
time. I'm sure all you DAREers are used to all this.
Dennis
preston[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]pilot.msu.edu
A colleague of mine wanted to make sure I added "chowderhead" to the "-head"
list. That then reminded me of "knucklehead,"(my frame of reference there
always was the "Archie" comic strip, I think) "fathead," "farthead," and
"dunderhead." The last one, I believe, grew out of "thunderhead," a
non-slang term for the clouds that roll in immediately ahead of a
thunderstorm, but somehow became synonymous with "chowderhead" et al.
Of course, now we have "Thunderheads"--a self-generated label for fans
of the "Thursday Night Thunder" auto races on ESPN.
It also struck me that "bighead" probably qualifies, as in "...gave him
the bighead" (and I think I've also heard "swellhead" for one with an
overblown confidence in oneself).
Also, as I recall, the American media dubbed the Beatles "mopheads" when
they first arrived here in '64 (although I imagine the term predates that).
Then there are "skinheads," the Nazi-type thugs of the '80s & '90s, but
I seem to remember the term being used for any bald guy prior to that (I
guess I qualify as a "semi-skinhead" at present or "soon-to-be-skinhead").
And let us not forget "maidenhead," that virtually extinct specie in the
sexually liberated '90s, or our old childhood friend "Mr. Potatohead." And
his close relatives of a later period, the "Coneheads."
And, finally, I seem to remember back in the '50s, when I was in high
school, the use of "peanuthead" for a person whose head seemed too small for
his/her body. (Of course, that could send us off into a sublist of "-brain"
words--i.e., "birdbrain," "peabrain," etc., but I don't know if the original
poster wants to go that far?)
Jerry Miller