[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] We~gierka
Rose Ingram
roseingram at shaw.ca
Sat Jan 17 11:44:44 PST 2009
Otto,
You mention "a special pale yellow, sweet, juicy plum"
This sounds like the plums we grew in our orchard. It was known as 'green gage' plum.
Rose Ingram
----- Original Message -----
From: Otto
To: GPV List
Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2009 11:24 AM
Subject: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] We~gierka
Afternoon all,
It will be interesting to see where this discovery process leads
regarding the word usage.
Anna Zgliñska's comment and contribution was refreshing because it is
a rare opportunity to hear opinions of one that is adept in their
mother language. I look forward to hearing her on more subjects.
I immediately tuned in to Jutta's comment, "The truth is not the
result of 'what most people think' or 'what has been published most
times''. How true. We have only facts to sort, facts built on
opinions. Especially 'dictionaries', volumes of opinions. A reality
check is necessary most of the time.
Jan with his linguistic preciseness is always appreciated.
I also approve of Jerry's intuitive approach because I viewed the map
he referenced and saw the same patterns he described employed by the
cartographer of that particular map. . . I still have a hold on the
gut feeling. . .
I only offer a brief tale.
For me there is a connection between Hungarians and plums.
Draw your own opinions.
One mile east of me where I lived on a farm as a boy lived a Hungarian
family with the surname Baran'yai. They wouldn't roast bacon (szalona)
over a fire-pit like like the other Hungarian family around the corner
from them, (cultural difference between the 'landed' and serfs)
instead they'd fry pork loin on a tin plate and drink hazi polinka,
Hungarian plum brandy.
The father, Julius, had an orchard of always heavily fruited plum
trees when in season different from the purple ones that we raised for
baking. They produced a special pale yellow, sweet, juicy plum which
he harvested and mashed, placed into large vats to ferment, then
pressed them and distilled the liquid, leaving him with an excellent
plum brandy—Hazi Polinka. Tasty firewater. When old, Julius sold the
farm. . . I bought the copper still. I still hanker to eat their
yellow plums. The shores of cool waters on the Weichsel River would
have been a great site to set up a still. Plum brandy has no ethnicity
connected to it.
. . . Otto
" The Zen moment..." wk. of January 04, 2009-
________________________________
"The future. . . . always catches up."
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