scurryfunge.

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who’s with me on this? have any of you also scurryfunged? 

To scurryfunge is to hurriedly clean the house before company arrives. This word has had a looser meaning of “to move rapidly” since the early 19th century but likely wasn’t used in the sense of a rapid cleanup until the 1950s, when it appeared in U.S. regional dialects. One definition was included in the 1975 book Maine Lingo by John Gould: “a hasty tidying of the house between the time you see a neighbor coming and the time she knocks on the door.” “Scurry” means “to move in or as if in a brisk pace,” but “Funge” remains a bit of an etymological mystery. This is debated. Some sources say it was a word in Old English, others say it is of “jocular formation.’’

 

 

 

 

source credits: babushka cat, interesting words, maine lingo, john gould

 

 


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99 responses »

  1. Awesome!! I love learning new words!!
    Yes, I can remember this from way back in my childhood days. No one waited for an invitation back then…just showed up. Luckily we could see them coming for a quarter mile up or down the road.

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  2. We joke that our house only gets cleaned when we invite someone over or we go away for a few days. The cleaning before vacation thing is me — I hate coming home to a messy house!!! Ha ha. The last time we went away for the weekend. My wife laughed at me. “Do we really need to change the sheets !!?!?” Ha ha. Love that you’re a word collector!

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  3. that’s me to a t!!!! having lots of visitors turning up unannounced I aLways have the perfect excuse for my messy flat. And everybody visiting me knows that I see very little and doesn’t expect that the furniture is dusted. IF anyone should make a remark I’d show them where the dusters and vacuum are living…

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