Saturday, April 19, 2008

Word of the day: scrimshander

I must have first heard the word scrimshaw in 1996. In the Simpson's episode in which Sideshow Bob threatens to destroy Springfield with an atom bomb, he appears on TV to announce his manifesto:
"Why, we could revive the lost arts of conversation...and scrimshaw. Thus I submit to you we abolish television, permanently!"
It took me until now, to actually find out what scrimshaw, and it's jolly relation scrimshander mean:

    A general name (also scrimshaw work) for the handicrafts practised by sailors by way of pastime during long whaling and other voyages, and for the products of these, as small manufactured articles, carvings on bone, ivory, or shells, and the like. Also {sm}scrimshaw v., trans. to decorate or produce as scrimshaw work; absol. to employ oneself in scrimshaw work; {sm}scrimshander, -shandy n.; {sm}scrimshoner, one who practises scrimshaw work.

1825-6 in Amer. Neptune (1952) XII. 104 All hands employed scrimshonting. 1850 N. KINGSLEY Diary 15 Dec. (1914) 161 There is plenty of time to tinker or read or do any kind of ‘Scrimshonging’ any-one feels disposed to do. 1851 H. MELVILLE Moby Dick I. 14, I found a number of young seamen..examining..divers specimens of scrimshander. Ibid. II. 128 Other like skrimshander articles. Ibid. II. xv. 128 The skrimshandering business. 1864 Hotten's Slang Dict., Scrimshaw, anything made by sailors for themselves in their leisure hours at sea is called Scrimshaw-work. 1883 CLARK RUSSELL Sailors' Lang., Scrimshandy, an Americanism signifying the objects in ivory or bone carved by whalemen during their long voyages. 1883 Fisheries Exhib. Catal. 198 Collection illustrating the games, amusements, literature, art-work of the fishermen; musical instruments, carvings (‘scrimshandy’), &c. Ibid. 207 Walrus tusks scrim-shawed, and frame made of walrus ivory. 1887 GOODE, etc. Fisheries of U.S. v. II. 231 Scrimshawing is..the art..of manufacturing useful and ornamental articles at sea. 1898 F. T. BULLEN Cruise of ‘Cachalot’ viii. 83 The great jaw~pans were sawn off, and placed at the disposal of anybody who wanted pieces of bone for ‘scrimshaw’, or carved work. Ibid. xxi. 258 Such pieces as were useful to the ‘scrimshoners’ for ornamenting their nicknacks. 1906 B. LUBBOCK Jack Derringer 171 Specimens of skrimshander, rare shells and Japanese nitchkies in cabinets. 1933 J. MASEFIELD Bird of Dawning 201 Narwhal's horns on which the scrimshaw worker was cutting crude designs of rope, sennits, ladies, hearts, arrows and clipper-ships. 1948 Atlantic Monthly Jan. 108/1 The Whaling Museum..displays a shelf of skrimshandering tools made by hand on the whaleship Awashonks. 1972 Times 16 Sept. 10/1 ‘Scrimshaw’ stoppers, worked by sailors on whalebone.

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