Talk:squab
Latest comment: 14 years ago by 71.111.229.19
I know we cannot wholesale import copyrighted material, but I found a great etymology for this word...can we use some of the information if we change the phrasing of our explanation to ensure that we don't plagiarize?
- 1682, "very young bird," earlier (1640) "unformed, lumpish person" and used at various times for any sort of flabby mass from sea slugs to sofa cushions; probably from a Scand. word (cf. dialectal Swed. skvabb "loose or fat flesh," skvabba "fat woman"), from P.Gmc. *(s)kwab- (cf. O.Pruss. gawabo "toad," O.C.S. zaba "frog").
- http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/squab