TROLLOP

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Dr. Goodword
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TROLLOP

Postby Dr. Goodword » Thu Mar 23, 2006 12:17 am

• trollop •

Pronunciation: trahl-êp • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: 1. A slovenly, messy, unkempt woman. 2. A woman of loose moral character.

Notes: It might be hard to call today's Good Word a 'good' word but it is interesting in that it represents a large pool of terms for women of loose morals, including harlot, strumpet, tart, tramp, slut, floozy, to mention just the mentionables. The list of words referring to males of loose morals is much smaller, e.g. philanderer, womanizer, gigolo, lady's man, and less negative—in fact, lady's man is all but positive. While we cannot change attitudes by changing vocabulary, our vocabulary does, in fact, provide compelling evidence of our attitudes over the course of time.

In Play: This word today is used mostly as an insult for someone we dislike (or secretly envy): "That trollop, Gladys Boise, has been seeing the boss a lot lately; I'll bet she gets a promotion soon." However, a trollop might simply be a slovenly looking woman: "Oddest thing: I saw a trollop reading a Trollope at the bus stop this morning." Even though most us avoid trollops, many of us admit that we enjoy curling up in bed with a good Trollope now and then (Barchester Towers is my favorite).

Word History: Today's rather shady word is based on the verb troll, which originally meant "to ramble, to wander about with no particular destination". This word was borrowed from French which borrowed it from an ancestor of German trollen "to toddle". The group [op] was then added to trol- by analogy with words like gallop and wallop, since [op] is not a suffix in English. (Thanks and a tip of Dr. Goodword's hat to Margie Sved, our favorite psychiatrist, for suggesting today's Good if slightly tarnished Word.)
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Slava
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The New Troll

Postby Slava » Sat May 22, 2010 8:41 pm

An addition to the meaning of the "troll" root:

An electronic mail message, Usenet posting or other (electronic) communication which is intentionally incorrect, but not overtly controversial (compare flame bait), or the act of sending such a message. Trolling aims to elicit an emotional reaction from those with a hair-trigger on the reply key. A really subtle troll makes some people lose their minds.
(1994-10-17)
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © Denis Howe 2010 http://foldoc.org

I vote we toss these in with the phishers and their ilk.
Life is like playing chess with chessmen who each have thoughts and feelings and motives of their own.


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