Jola Cinal
Funny-Sounding & Interesting English Word: Cattywampus Funny-Sounding & Interesting English Word: Cattywampus Definition: dialect : askew, awry, kitty-corner Example: "The points ... where [the two grids] would meet became Broadway and Colfax Ave. which is why to this day downtown Denver sits catty-wampus to the rest of the city." – Francis J. Pierson and Dennis J. Gallagher, Getting to Know Denver: Five Fabulous Walking Tours, 2006 About the Word: Long ago English gamblers called the four-dotted side of a die cater (from the French quatre, "four"). The placement of those four dots suggested two diagonal lines, which is likely how cater came to mean (dialectally, anyway) "to place, move, or cut across diagonally."
May 23, 2015 2:15 PM
Corrections · 2
Sigogglin? :) Sounds interesting. Thanks Michael :)
May 28, 2015
I haven't heard this used too often, it is a bit antiquated, but I did recognize it immediately. More often one would use "askew" or more casually "screwy". Another odd word with a similar meaning that is used in the Appalachian mountains near here is "sigogglin"
May 23, 2015
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