关闭

2HZZ常识网

Gigman, babbit, and booboisie

2025-01-26 01:27:17浏览:
Gigman, babbit, and booboisieWord for the Wise December 04, 2006 Broadcast Topic: Gigman, babbit, and booboisie Thomas Carlyle was born on this date in 1795.
A passionate historian, and fallen-away Calvinist, the Scottish-born writer influenced movements as diverse as existentialism, transcendentalism, socialism and fascism.
He believed in heroes and literature, work and thought.
(来源:英语学习门户网站2hzz.
com)
What he did not believe in—or to be fair, what he did not trust in—was democracy, which he considered pie-in-the sky, or, to quote the man who dubbed economics a dismal science, a self-canceling business…[which] gives, in the long run, a net result of zero.
Thomas Carlyle also coined a term which hasn't lasted but whose meaning has reappeared again and again, authored by other writers: gigman.
A gigman is a fellow who pays all respect to, and prides himself on, respectability.
A gig is a light, two-wheeled, one horse carriage.
Carlyle took his term from a story of a court witness who described a person as respectable, only to be asked by the judge what he meant by the word.
A man who keeps a gig was the answer.
We'll pass along two of our favorite latter-day gigman kin and invite you to send along any you think of.
Sinclair Lewis gave us Babbit, a business or professional man who conforms unthinkingly to prevailing middle-class standards; H.
L.
Mencken coined booboisie, a blend of boob plus bourgeoisie, used for the general public regarded as consisting of boobs.