Date: Thu, 9 Nov 1995 08:59:18 -0800
From: Dan Moonhawk Alford dalford[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]S1.CSUHAYWARD.EDU
Subject: Re: Knarly?
I know I'm the one who started this thread one way, but now I MUST
suggest another direction, my wife's intuition that the word as meaning
'cool' is really 'narly' and is merely homophonous with 'gnarly'.
On Thu, 9 Nov 1995, Jenny Becker wrote:
"Gnarly" comes from "gnarled," which, according to Webster's Third, means
"warped or twisted with or as if with gnarls." While "gnarly" may be used
in popular speech to mean both "disgusting" and "cool" (I think), there is
certainly a standard spelling for it.
Jenny Becker
beckerj[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]omri.cz
This word is difficult in that it is normally restricted to oral use.
Although a preceived spelling may be present with its usage, I cannot
say for certain whether the spelling has truly been standardized.
Tom
I know it's too soon for prescriptivism here, but isn't it usually spelt
"gnarly"? Funny what a history of silent letters can do!
On Wed, 8 Nov 1995, SETH SKLAREY wrote:
In Golden Beach, Florida they used to have them on the median strip, and
trimmed them down all the time. It is a very hard, knarly plant when
treate
d
Tom Uharriet
utom[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]admn.712.nebo.edu