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Re: Not snazzy (was: New Unicode Savvy Logo): msg#00713text.unicode.general
On Wed, 28 May 2003 08:02:13 -0400, John Cowan wrote: > In case your dictionary does not explain this, its etymology is the > Portuguese verb "saber" < Lat. SAPERE, which was used in the original > Lingua Franca and from there spread into almost all the pidgins and > creoles of the Earth. As you can well imagine, a pidgin needs a verb > for "understand/comprehend" as one of its very basic words! So it > can be verb ("understand"), adjective ("being able to understand"), > or noun ("comprehension"). The last is the least informal, at least in > English; the adjective is evidently meant here, and in more normative > orthography "Unicode-savvy" would be used. The OED says "Orig. Black & pidgin Eng. after Sp. sabe usted you know" To me at least, it conjures up images of Tonto speaking to the Lone Ranger : "Me no savvy, Kemo Sabe". Andrew To Unsubscribe, send a blank message to: unicode-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx This mailing list is just an archive. The instructions to join the true Unicode List are on http://www.unicode.org/unicode/consortium/distlist.html Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ |
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