Humbug
Every new word makes someone complain. Here’s how “humbug” was received in the 1750s.
There is a word very much in vogue with the people of taste and fashion, which though it has not even the ‘penumbra’ of a meaning, yet makes up the sum total of the wit, sense and judgement of the aforesaid people of taste and fashion! I will venture to affirm that this ‘Humbug’ is neither an English word, nor a derivative from any other language. It is indeed a blackguard sound, made use of by most people of distinction! It is a fine make-weight in conversation, and some great men deceive themselves so egregiously as to think they mean something by it! – “The Student; or the Oxford and Cambridge monthly miscellany”, 1750
…odious, horrible, detestable, shocking, Humbug. This last new-coined expression, which is only to be found in the nonsensical vocabulary, sounds absurd and disagreeable, whenever it is pronounced. – “The Connoisseur”, 1754, issue 14
Our pretenders to wit is not still more barbarous. When they talk of Humbug, &c. they seem to be jabbering in the uncouth dialect of the Huns. – “The Connoisseur”, 1754, issue 42
[image: “Mint humbugs” by Ka Faraq Gatri. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0] This entry was originally posted at http://marnanel.dreamwidth.org/341103.html. Please comment there using OpenID.
Syndicated 2015-09-23 20:28:03 (Updated 2015-09-23 20:31:13) from Monument