Being a visual and verbal chronologue of my peculiar life, foremost my research interests—death and the anatomical body—and travels and people I've met in pursuit of same; my collecting interests—fossils, postmortem photographs, weird news, and new acquisitions to my “museum”; and (reluctantly) my health, having been diagnosed with MS in 1990. "Satisfying my morbid curiosity and yours..."
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Pope's nose
Today's post will be short and (to some, delectably) sweet (3rd image, from Thailand). It depends how you feel about the "south end of a chicken going north," as my Dad used to phrase it. My Mom, on the other hand, calls the tail end of the chicken (2nd image) the "pope's nose." The last time she used that expression, we wondered where it came from. Well, it turns out to be several centuries old. The Oxford English Dictionary cites its first use in print in 1788 by English antiquary and lexicographer Francis Grose (1st image). But Wikipedia finds a 15th-century reference to the related phrase "parson's nose" in the form of a derisive carving in an English church, and reasons that it characterizes the vicar as having his nose in the air like what is technically known as the chicken's pygostyle. The expression was modified to the "pope's nose" to demean Catholics and the "sultan's nose" to insult Turks during the wars with the Ottoman Empire.
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