Idly flipping through a book of euphemisms, I learned today that the word 'cleavage' was first recorded in the mid-1940s.
I find it hard to believe the English language survived for as long as it did before coining such a useful term.
I'm now wondering - do other languages have a word for cleavage, and do they predate the english term?
I find it hard to believe the English language survived for as long as it did before coining such a useful term.
I'm now wondering - do other languages have a word for cleavage, and do they predate the english term?
no subject
on 2007-11-22 01:58 pm (UTC)Example,
CARE
Though of ear unheard, the groaning
Heart is conscious of my moaning;
In ever changing guise
Cruel power I exercise.
On the highway, on the billow,
Cleave I close, a carking fellow;
Ever found, an unsought guest,
Ever cursed and aye caressed.
Hast though not Care already known?
-- Faust, Goethe.
In the above, 'cleave' is the Carer adhering to the carking fellow, like a parasitic leech.