This Limey can stick his nous up his ass. Americans demonstrate at elections that change the government peacefully. The aristocrat encumbered view from former Roman colonies, such as Britain, sees rioting with mass property damage as the only way to get government change from a government by a King and his gang of aristocrats.
[i]The aristocrat encumbered view from former Roman colonies, such as Britain, sees rioting with mass property damage as the only way to get government change from a government by a King and his gang of aristocrats.[/i]
As an American - you should watch your analogies :-p
What I find confusing is the commentator over there who helpfully pointed out to UK-ites that using slang like "nous" in the US might get one branded a neocon.
Paying attention to those Dead White Male Greek guys might make someone think yer one of them thar neo-con Straussians or somethin'.
Lefties think that Straussians are a secret cabal that's the brain trust of the Right, and that the Straussians have a secret teaching that consists in turning lefties into Soylent Green.
Traditionalguy -- on the other hand, Americans feel entitled to be profoundly rude to people they've never met under the mask of anonymity. Apparently. I'm sure it is cathartic.
Xenophobes and parochialists everywhere -- CT is an international forum. "nous" is a standard northern working class useage meaning "common sense". Its ok, Brits are offended by American useages that pervade their culture too. Parochialism and xenophobia are not parochial.
I brush elbows with our English speaking compatriots on the right side of the pond often enough that I use British spellings without notice. Same with Oz.
I think that nous is a neat word, but it's one I'm sure I've never heard. Not that I think I have some sort of comprehensive exposure to language or anything, but the idea that "nous" brands one as a neocon in the US is rather odd. Perhaps the person who said so wasn't aware that the usage was so narrow.
In my experience there are any number of regional usages in the US that local people never realise isn't common to other regions as well. The US is a large and linguistically varied place.
Support the Althouse blog by doing your Amazon shopping going in through the Althouse Amazon link.
Amazon
I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Support this blog with PayPal
Make a 1-time donation or set up a monthly donation of any amount you choose:
18 comments:
I hate seeing "nous" - I always read it as "we".
Pronounced differently too - which half of the time sparks a "Knights who say Nu" "No No, it's a NI sound. Ni Ni!" rant to anyone in the area.
The classical opposite is hyle.
Noose?
Not civil at all.
This Limey can stick his nous up his ass. Americans demonstrate at elections that change the government peacefully. The aristocrat encumbered view from former Roman colonies, such as Britain, sees rioting with mass property damage as the only way to get government change from a government by a King and his gang of aristocrats.
[i]The aristocrat encumbered view from former Roman colonies, such as Britain, sees rioting with mass property damage as the only way to get government change from a government by a King and his gang of aristocrats.[/i]
As an American - you should watch your analogies :-p
oh damn too much message board time - used the wrong flags. Oh well, you get it.
"The divine reason regarded in Neoplatonism as the first emanation of God"?
Or maybe just pretentious slang.
"[I]f only we have the nous to know what to do next..."
We don't have princes here in the States.. unless you consider union bosses and union thugs.
Pas d'elle yeux Rhone que nous, Ann.
Nah, he's being pompous.
It's Nous in the Aristotelian sense of "mind", as in the mind of a knowing intellect. Meaning in this case "do we have the brains to do X".
What! Doesn't everybody drop Aristotelian Greek into their daily conversation? Anthropos esti leukos yerself, ya putz!
So... nous means "smarts".
What I find confusing is the commentator over there who helpfully pointed out to UK-ites that using slang like "nous" in the US might get one branded a neocon.
Huh?
@Synova,
Paying attention to those Dead White Male Greek guys might make someone think yer one of them thar neo-con Straussians or somethin'.
Lefties think that Straussians are a secret cabal that's the brain trust of the Right, and that the Straussians have a secret teaching that consists in turning lefties into Soylent Green.
"[I]f only we have the nous to know what to do next ..."
But does he have a nose for nous?
Aristotle was all about unions, and the Nicomachean Ethics was really a call to unionize (more on that later... and by later, I mean never).
Traditionalguy -- on the other hand, Americans feel entitled to be profoundly rude to people they've never met under the mask of anonymity. Apparently. I'm sure it is cathartic.
Xenophobes and parochialists everywhere -- CT is an international forum. "nous" is a standard northern working class useage meaning "common sense". Its ok, Brits are offended by American useages that pervade their culture too. Parochialism and xenophobia are not parochial.
I brush elbows with our English speaking compatriots on the right side of the pond often enough that I use British spellings without notice. Same with Oz.
I think that nous is a neat word, but it's one I'm sure I've never heard. Not that I think I have some sort of comprehensive exposure to language or anything, but the idea that "nous" brands one as a neocon in the US is rather odd. Perhaps the person who said so wasn't aware that the usage was so narrow.
In my experience there are any number of regional usages in the US that local people never realise isn't common to other regions as well. The US is a large and linguistically varied place.
Post a Comment