But this "jasm" definition gives the etymology: "Apparently a variant of jism." Now, come on. That has to be sexual. But jism originally meant "energy, strength," going back to 1842:
1842 Spirit of Times 29 Oct. 409/3 At the drawgate Spicer tried it on again, but his horse was knocked up—‘the gism’ and the starch was effectively taken out of him by the long and desperate struggles he had been obliged to maintain.
1886 Harper's Mag. Sept. 579/2 The most shif'less creeter I ever see. Willin', but hain't no more jas'm than a dead corn-stalk.But the second meaning is "semen, sperm," as old as 1899 ("Often regarded as a taboo-word"):
1899 B. W. Green Word-bk. Virginia Folk-speech 85 Chism, chissum, seminal fluid.If it's a taboo word, with that meaning, it would be less likely to appear in print. In fact, the OED doesn't have another example of the semen meaning until 1959 when — speaking of taboo — William S. Burroughs had the nerve to write: "The Moslems must have blood and jissom... See, see where Christ's blood streams in the spermament."
Anyway, speaking of jasm/jism, "spunk" is a similar word. It could be used to describe a Mary-Tyler-Moore-style woman, referring to "Spirit, mettle; courage, pluck," which the OED traces back to 1773 in Oliver Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer." ("The 'Squire has got spunk in him.") And it can mean "Seminal fluid," going back to 1890's "My Secret Life." ("It seemed to me scarcely possible, that the sweet, well dressed, smooth-spoken ladies..could let men put the spunk up their cunts.")
The OED informs us that this use of "spunk" is "coarse slang," and adds, enticingly, "For the sense development, compare the obs. slang mettle, which had the same meaning.." Mettle!
"Mettle" goes way back, meaning "A person's character, disposition, or temperament; the ‘stuff’ of which one is made, regarded as an indication of one's character" or "A person's spirit; courage, strength of character; vigour, spiritedness, vivacity." Shakespeare used "mettle" in "Twelfth Night": "I am one, that had rather go with sir Priest, then sir knight: I care not who knowes so much of my mettle." But when did the semen meaning kick in? Was Shakespeare making a jism joke? Ah, but in fact, the OED has led me into a blind alley, because no semen meaning for "mettle" even appears.
There's also the word "jizz," which the OED defines only as "The characteristic impression given by an animal or plant," as in:
1922 T. A. Coward Bird Haunts & Nature Memories 141 A West Coast Irishman was familiar with the wild creatures which dwelt on or visited his rocks and shores; at a glance he could name them, usually correctly, but if asked how he knew them would reply ‘By their “jizz”.’ What is jizz?..We have not coined it, but how wide its use in Ireland is we cannot say... Jizz may be applied to or possessed by any animate and some inanimate objects, yet we cannot clearly define it. A single character may supply it, or it may be the combination of many....A useful word, and yet you can't use it like that in the United States.
1950 Brit. Birds XLIII. 29 Miss Quick obviously looks at her birds more than once and does so with an artist's eye for those peculiarities of shape, outline and stance which give a species its ‘jizz’....
1966 D. McClintock Compan. Flowers ix. 117, I know only too well the problem of trying to express what there is in a plant that enables me, or you, to tell it from another at sight. The word I use for these intangible characteristics, that defy being put into words, is jizz.
***
In case you want to read more, here's the William S. Burroughs's book quoted above, "Naked Lunch." That's "The Restored Text," which, oddly enough, is #25 on Amazon's list "Books > Humor & Entertainment > Humor > Self-Help & Psychology." What?! Somehow "Naked Lunch" makes it onto a list that includes Mitch Albom's "The Five People You Meet in Heaven" and "He's Just Not That Into You: The No-Excuses Truth to Understanding Guys." Well, I'm interested in understanding guys. But I'm only buying "Naked Lunch." As long as I'm ending with a few Amazon links, though, and the subject of William S. Burroughs has come up, let me recommend an audio recording I've played 100s of times: "Dead City Radio."
21 comments:
All spunked up this morning?
Chism???
You mean there were dirty parts in the Duke's movie?
Ann Althouse said...
"spunk" is a similar word. It could be used to describe a Mary-Tyler-Moore-style woman, referring to "Spirit, mettle; courage, pluck," which the OED traces back to 1773 in Oliver Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer." ("The 'Squire has got spunk in him.")
Before feminism made such women (girls, usually) so obnoxious, a girl who stood up for herself in an endearing fashion was spunky.
PS Of course, The Blonde has always contended the best part of a man comes out during sex.
I like "brogurt" myself.
Peter
"PS Of course, The Blonde has always contended the best part of a man comes out during sex."
Oh. Gives new meaning to "sex ed."
I can't read this. The word is
LIGHTNING
Ugh. I'll give him a pass since it's written in 1860. You could've put a [sic] on it though. You, a lawyer.
"Ugh. I'll give him a pass since it's written in 1860. You could've put a [sic] on it though. You, a lawyer."
Do you have any idea how long the OED would be if every spelling that is now nonstandard were marked like that?!
I'm cutting and pasting and accept the authority of the OED, so I won't vary the spelling or call attention to anomalies like that.
@MadisonMan The OED has this under "lightning"
Forms: Also ME liȝtnynge, ME, 15 lyghtnyng, ME–15 lightnyng, lyght(e)nynge, lyt(e)nynge, (ME litynnynge, 15 lyghteling), 15–17 lightening, 16–17 light'ning.(Show Less)
Etymology: Special use of lightening n.2; now differentiated in spelling.
And under "lightening," there is discussion of the phrase "a lightening before death" — meaning "that exhilaration or revival of the spirits which is supposed to occur in some instances just before death," and:
1654 E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot iii. viii. 125 Not that I Lightning or fell Thunder feare, (Unless that Lightning before death appear).
""If you'll take thunder and lightening, and a steamboat and a buzz-saw, and mix 'em up, and put 'em into a woman, that's jasm.""
That's exactly how I do it, but I don't spell it "jasm". Are you sure that's right?
Lightening is the process by which the fetus drops and becomes engaged in the birth canal.
When I see thunder and lightening, I think of that. Always makes me chuckle.
"Lightening is the process by which the fetus drops and becomes engaged in the birth canal."
It's also the familiar verb "lighten" made into a noun, using "-ing."
Meade said...
PS Of course, The Blonde has always contended the best part of a man comes out during sex.
Oh. Gives new meaning to "sex ed."
I'll let you run that one past her.
Roger that, Ann.
I don't think I had ever run across the word "jasm" before so thanks for a learning experience.
I've heard "spunk" all my life in normal conversation. I don't recall it ever having any sexual connotation before the past 20-30 years.
Spunk as in "He has a lot of spunk to take on the boss like that"
John Henry
Going "balls out" to get this note "dead nuts"
Another use of "spunk":
"Say -- what is dead cats good for, Huck?"
"Good for? Cure warts with."
"No! Is that so? I know something that's better."
"I bet you don't. What is it?"
"Why, spunk-water. . . You got to go all by yourself, to the middle of the woods, where you know there's a spunk-water stump, and just as it's midnight you back up against the stump and jam your hand in and say:
'Barley-corn, barley-corn, injun-meal shorts,
Spunk-water, spunk-water, swaller these warts,'
and then walk away quick, eleven steps, with your eyes shut, and then turn around three times and walk home without speaking to anybody. Because if you speak the charm's busted. . .Sometimes I take 'em off with a bean."
Mark Twain --- Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
I remember this passage because I was in an in-front-of-class play in 7th grade and had to memorize the part. I remember the "Barley corn, barley corn" incantation to this day.
I've asked this before Ann, but have you looked at DARE? (Dictionary of American Regional English) It's published by the UW. It's volumes of reference on stuff like this. I was just wondering if you ever used it? http://dare.wisc.edu/ OED is great, but you may have the best reference in the world for this kind of thing available to you through the school. :)
There are only so many four letter words, they need to be recycled for a sustainable language future. It's green English.
Thunder and lightening, oh so very frightening.
In Philadelphia the local accent has rendered jizz as "jit", as in, "What a jit-bag", etc.
'Jazz' was originally spelled 'Jass' and this from no other an authority than Ken Burns.
So
BTW, 'balls-to-the-wall' has nothing to do with sex. It refers to the throttle levers on some aircraft having ball knobs on the end. Pushing them toward the firewall meant maximum power. Likewise 'cockpit' was not originally sexual. It referred to fact that the arrangement of a fighter plane cabin looked like a miniature cockfighting arena. However I did hear of some female military pilots refer to the cockpit as the box-office. I believe the term 'joystick' was originally sexual.
If she found gold, it would be ore jasm.
I saw the Mary Tyler Moore tag and wondered how she was tied into the word jism. (Thinking perhaps Meade was still pondering her thigh gap.)
The I read the "more" continuation and saw the connection with that memorable "spunk" comment Lou Grant made to Mary Richards.
Interesting and long connected chain of thoughts.
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