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Ditchwater - album of the year: https://www.albumoftheyear.org/album/574131-ditchwater-going-forward-looking-back.php |
+1 I just typed in "ditchwater hair color" and every single result had changed it to "dishwater hair color." Why can't the PP just admit she's been saying it wrong all these years? |
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+1 I used to think the word vapid was pronounced "VAY-pid." This was up until relatively recently.
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Me too!! For years that's how I pronounced Penelope. Like cantaloupe. |
Soooooooooo According to google: The phrase "middle-aged dishwater blonde" comes from the I Love Lucy episode "Lucy and John Wayne" (Season 5, Episode 1). A newspaper article describes Lucy and Ethel—after they steal John Wayne's footprints—as "a middle-aged dishwater blonde" (Ethel) and a "wild-eyed, frowzy redhead" www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1599583287083110&vanity=ilovelucyscenes |
DP. It can, but mousy blonde/brown is also a hair color descriptor. |
If it's light brownish - it can absolutely be called mousy brown.
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Only if it’s messy, undone, and dirty looking. |
Dishwater blond is Gwyneth Paltrow in Sliding Doors, the character version that did not dye her hair and cut it short. |
I texted daughter to let her know their were others of her kind 😂 |
Clay can be red, or yellow, or white, or dark gray, or bluish. https://greensdictofslang.com/entry/mo4nmfa dishwater blond(e) (n.) (US) a woman, or man, with ash-blonde hair. 1931 [US] C. Martinez ‘Gats in the Hat’ in Gun Molls Sept. 🌐 ‘It was that dish-water blonde!’ cried Carmen suddenly. 1958 [US] E. Gilbert Vice Trap 39: She was a dishwater blonde, with these cow eyes, but a sexy mouth. 1958 [US] W. Motley Let No Man Write My Epitaph (1960) 304: He was quite a big guy, tall, a dishwater blond. 2012 [US] M. McBride Frank Sinatra in a Blender [ebook] He pointed with an ink pen to a dishwater blonde on the floor. 2012 [Aus] A. Nette ‘Chasing Atlantis’ in Crime Factory: Hard Labour [ebook] A dishwater blonde in her forties, tonight she wore black cotton pants. 2023 [Aus] A. Nette Orphan Road 72: [A] dishwater blonde in khaki camouflage pants and a blue T-shirt. |
| I think of dishwater blonde in connection with my brothers' hair. They all started out with the lightest possible blonde that gradually darkened to nearly black, but they never really looked like they had brown hair (I'm brunette, my sister was a dark copper). Sort of like they had no color, only went light to dark without any hues joining in. |
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Don't be mean to ditchwater, please. Especially since I'll bet you're been pronouncing Thoreau wrong all these years (turns out it's pronounce "Thorough")
I pegged ditchwater poster to the south, like Georgia, although red clays are found elsewhere (and apparently under most of the Pacific) but she could be from many other parts of the world. And it could be that there's a hyper-local usage. The summer after high school I was a waitress in my grandparents' small rural town, spent the summer at their house. My boss was a very dumb person. He and the cook had a long argument one slow afternoon because he insisted the machine that played records if you put in a quarter was a jute box. Based on Google, it's a more common mistake to say jute box than to say ditchwater blond. I found exactly one Google reference where someone asked if it was ditchwater or dishwater, and they were actually talking about the color of their guitar. Therefore PP Ditchwater's mistake (in terms of common usage) is unique enough to be praiseworthy IMO, and good for PP for standing up for herself. My best friend in college was the daughter of scientists. When we did fruit fly experiments in biology we had to go in every 6 hours to knock out our flies with ether to make sure any females were virgins. She honestly thought this was not to control preproductive data but because non virgin fruit flies were considered immoral sluts and it offended her feminist sensibilities. |
Frowzy? There's a word not in common use. It needs to make a comeback. |