IN CASE YOU WONDERED...
Or, even if you didn't wonder . . . today we're going to explore a phrase that seems to be in regular use in our country: OLD SCHOOL.
Know how long it's been around? Go ahead, have a guess--10 years? 20 years? Mid-to-late 20th Century?
Nope, all wrong. My Oxford Dictionary & English Usage lists 1749 as the first use. That's right--not a typo--1749. That's more than two and a half centuries ago!
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Now, in case you never figured out what Old School means--and even if you don't really care (I have a lot of things like that in my life)--here are a couple of definitions/usages:
1: adhering
to traditional policies or practices--an old-school coach
2: characteristic
or evocative of an earlier or original style, manner, or form--old-school music
I sense you're muttering to yourself--why is she going on about this, anyway? Well, I'll tell you why.
Yesterday I finished reading a mystery by Alan Hunter, a Brit, who wrote the George Gently series. In the very first book in the series the term "old school" was used to describe Chief Inspector Gently's methods--he thinks of himself as a traditionalist, following prescribed protocols for detection. The out-of-town police force he's been sent to assist have their own tried-and-true methods--you can almost hear them saying, "That's not the way we do things down/up/over/out here." So he's branded "old school." (Incidentally, he isn't unduly bothered by their opinions of him. Good thing, too, because he later uncovers the true villain.) (Not only that, he isn't a "letter of the law" kind of detective; he uses what he has, mainly his brain and his intuition. He says police work isn't only science, it's an art, too.)
Alan Hunter's debut in the crime novel genre was in 1955. When I came to "old school" in a book as old as that (admittedly, I am older than that myself), I was intrigued. Really? Used in 1955?
That's what sent me off to look in whatever reference books I own to see if there was any chance the term was around longer ago.
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I'm not sure why you need to know about a 270-plus-year-old phrase. Not sure why I need to know either.
Could it all boil down to how we view ourselves? If it's a new word, a new phrase, or simply a new way of using that word/phrase, did we just invent it, say in the past few years? Did we hear it on TV, or read it in a printed work, or come across it on the Internet (that repository of practically everything you'd ever want to know, or not)?
Are we so vain that we think all "new" things are really new? Wouldn't surprise me a bit.
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But we might remember the following:
That which has been is what will be, That which is done is
what will be done, And there is nothing new under the sun.
Ecclesiastes 1:9 (New King James Version)
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While you ponder and mull this week, you might also remember this is a time leading up to Palm Sunday, Holy Week, and, finally, glorious Easter.
Til next time,
Blessings!
Thursday's Child
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