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"01-17-10 - Nob or Knob -"

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Blogger Tom Forsyth said...

Protuberance = knob. Germanic roots going back through knobbe. Also nub, nubbin, etc.

Important person = nob. From "nabob" which (like a lot of honorifics) was brought back to the UK by soldiers returning from conquering various parts of the world.

January 19, 2010 at 12:43 PM

Blogger cbloom said...

"Important person = nob. From "nabob" which (like a lot of honorifics) was brought back to the UK by soldiers returning from conquering various parts of the world."

This is almost definitely not true. Nob appears in old english before "Nabob" came back from the orient. OED says origin of "nob" is uncertain but may have been a slang contraction of "noble".

It is suggested that when the word "nabob" was brought back from the orient the pre-existing word "nob" was conflated with "nabob".

Nobs may also have come from "nabs" or "nibs" or "nebs" which all appear in old english.

http://www.grammarphobia.com/blog/2006/12/her-nibs-miss-georgia-gibbs.html

http://www.vocaboly.com/forums/ftopic8939.html

http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-nib1.htm

January 20, 2010 at 8:53 AM

Blogger cbloom said...

Alternate origin of "nob" (meaning important person) is from "his nebs" with neb meaning nose, or from "nab" with nab meaning head.

I think all we can say is that nob is old english and origin is uncertain.

My guess about cribbage might also be way off. Apparently some people say "for his nibs" about the jack instead of "for his nobs", which would seem to indicate the origin is more like "head" , eg. "because he has a head" , rather than related to the word "noddy". Perhaps cribbage was originally played on a deck where only the jack had a head?

January 20, 2010 at 8:58 AM

Blogger cbloom said...

Apparently the British also use "nobbing" as a verb for "carrying on your head" , as in a "brick nobber".

There are zero google hits, but this bloke claims he was a brick nobber :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yM86WR9sc3I&feature=related

February 1, 2010 at 7:59 PM

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