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-   -   Looks llike Piers is on a roll. (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/173035-looks-llike-piers-roll.html)

[email protected] January 13th 17 01:34 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:50:01 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote:

On 1/12/17 5:51 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 15:51:56 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote:

I spell navee the way it was officially spelled in the past.


Only if your historian is Gilbert and Sullivan ... but perhaps it is.
You are much stronger on fiction than fact.

"Navee" comes from the lyrics of HMS Pinafore, simply so those
liberal arts singers would keep the meter right and that is the only
reference I have ever seen.
I understand you have an affinity for the 18th century for the Royal
Navy when the tradition was flogging, rum and sodomy but I find no
reference that they spelled it "Navee".
It certainly never was accepted here.
The Constitution article 1 Section 8 (13): says
"To provide and maintain a NAVY".

The words that mean "navy" go back to at least the 1300s and include
navee, nauye, navye, nauie, nauy, and others. Whether it was "accepted
here" is not relevant.


I suppose you have a cite for that.

True North[_2_] January 13th 17 01:39 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
When I think of the US Navy, I think of Justine prancing around with the Village People on the deck of the battleship screeching out the lyrics of 'In the Navy'.

Keyser Soze January 13th 17 01:47 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
On 1/12/17 8:34 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:50:01 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote:

On 1/12/17 5:51 PM,
wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 15:51:56 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote:

I spell navee the way it was officially spelled in the past.

Only if your historian is Gilbert and Sullivan ... but perhaps it is.
You are much stronger on fiction than fact.

"Navee" comes from the lyrics of HMS Pinafore, simply so those
liberal arts singers would keep the meter right and that is the only
reference I have ever seen.
I understand you have an affinity for the 18th century for the Royal
Navy when the tradition was flogging, rum and sodomy but I find no
reference that they spelled it "Navee".
It certainly never was accepted here.
The Constitution article 1 Section 8 (13): says
"To provide and maintain a NAVY".

The words that mean "navy" go back to at least the 1300s and include
navee, nauye, navye, nauie, nauy, and others. Whether it was "accepted
here" is not relevant.


I suppose you have a cite for that.


My unabridged copy of the OED...would that do?

Keyser Soze January 13th 17 01:48 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
On 1/12/17 8:39 PM, True North wrote:
When I think of the US Navy, I think of Justine prancing around with the Village People on the deck of the battleship screeching out the lyrics of 'In the Navy'.


So do I, except for the fact that the Village People were talented.

justan January 13th 17 01:50 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
True North Wrote in message:
When I think of the US Navy, I think of Justine prancing around with the Village People on the deck of the battleship screeching out the lyrics of 'In the Navy'.


You really are a dip****.
--
x


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[email protected] January 13th 17 03:48 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 20:47:24 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote:

On 1/12/17 8:34 PM, wrote:


I suppose you have a cite for that.


My unabridged copy of the OED...would that do?


Evidently that never made it online. You must have a special copy

Califbill January 13th 17 04:09 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
True North wrote:
When I think of the US Navy, I think of Justine prancing around with the
Village People on the deck of the battleship screeching out the lyrics of 'In the Navy'.


You have a problem thinking.


Poco Loco January 13th 17 11:03 AM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 17:39:12 -0800 (PST), True North wrote:

When I think of the US Navy, I think of Justine prancing around with the Village People on the deck of the battleship screeching out the lyrics of 'In the Navy'.


You actually do that?

When you think of yourself what do you see?

Keyser Soze January 13th 17 01:17 PM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
On 1/12/17 10:48 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 20:47:24 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote:

On 1/12/17 8:34 PM,
wrote:

I suppose you have a cite for that.


My unabridged copy of the OED...would that do?


Evidently that never made it online. You must have a special copy


There are lots of reference books and materials that "never made it
online," but the OED is not one of them. It's available online. But I
have my own copy of the OED and have had it for 20+ years, at least.

Here, just for you, boychik:

navy1

(ˈneɪvɪ)

Forms: 4–5 nauye, navye, 4–7 nauie, navie, 5–7 nauy, 5– navy; 4–5 nauee,
navee, 5–6 naue, nave.

[a. OF. navie fleet:—Romanic *navia, f. L. nāvis ship: see -y3.]

*1.1 a.1.a (Without article.) Number of ships; ships or shipping. Obs.

c 1330 R. Brunne Chron. (1810) 24 A duke‥aryued on þis lond with
fulle grete nauie. c 1385 Chaucer L.G.W. 960 Dido, In libie onethe
aryuede he With schepis vij & with no more nauye. c 1450 St. Cuthbert
(Surtees) 4789 In his tyme come ouer þe se A paynyme kyng with grete
naue. 1473 J. Warkworth Chron. (Camden) 17 Quene Marget‥hade nauy to
brynge them to Englonde.

*b.1.b by navy, by ship. (Cf. OF. par navie.) Obs.

c 1400 Mandeville (1839) xxvii. 273 No man may passe that See by
Navye, ne be no maner of craft. 1412–20 Lydg. Chron. Troy Prol., How
they come by lande or by nauy,‥Of this Cornelie maketh no menciowne.

2. a.2.a A fleet; a number of ships collected together, esp. for
purposes of war. Now poet. and rhet.

c 1330 R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 2152 A gret nauye he dide hym
dight. 1382 Wyclif 1 Kings x. 11 The nauee of Yram, the which bare
gold of Oofer. c 1450 Merlin 378 Gawein made‥take shippes and
assembled a grete navie. 1483 in Ellis Orig. Lett. Ser. ii. I. 158
The king shuld have a Navie upon the see, to shewe himself as a king.
a 1533 Ld. Berners Gold. Bk. M. Aurel. (1546) K v, A great nauy of
warre, to the numbre of c. and .xxx. ships. a 1586 Sidney Arcadia ii.
(1613) 123 The trayterous Sea began to swell in pride against the
afflicted Navie. 1627 Capt. Smith Seaman's Gram. xiii. 63 Betweene
two Navies they vse often‥to fill old Barkes with pitch, tar [etc.].
1659 in England's Conf. 8 No person shall have‥any Command‥in any of
the Armies or Navyes of England. 1725 Pope Odyss. viii. 550 From the
shores the winged navy flies. 1777 Burke Let. to Rockingham Wks. IX.
167 We set our faces against great armies‥and navies, who have tasted of
civil spoil. 1817 Shelley Rev. Islam x. iv, The sea shook with their
Navies' sound. 1858 Mrs. Oliphant Laird of Norlaw I. 279 The masts
were in forests, the ships in navies...


And much much much more...

True North[_2_] January 13th 17 02:28 PM

Looks llike Piers is on a roll.
 
That would be a full time job trying to educate the motley crew of repugnants that infest this newsgroup.


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