by Frank Birdsong December 28, 2005
It is in Webster's Unabridged, as an Old English word which basically means messed up, or FUBAR. The Carteret language is the closest to Shakespeare's in the world, due to their lengthy isolation.
by Bob Geller January 10, 2008
by Capt. Katie May 30, 2006
by Luffa 1 November 04, 2009
by ket d January 24, 2009
Worry, Worried.
A linguist, so he claimed, said the only use he could find was in a play by Shakespear. It was "Mommick a string". Gee, worry a string, a knot, beads, etc.
A linguist, so he claimed, said the only use he could find was in a play by Shakespear. It was "Mommick a string". Gee, worry a string, a knot, beads, etc.
Haven't you mommicked the life out of me this day!
A Mother to a child. The only way I've ever heard it used. Yeah I'm from coastal NC. Morehead City. My Aunts from Wades shore on Shackleford (1880's)used it this way as did the younger of my sisters. Newer uses have apparently arrived. Evolution.
A Mother to a child. The only way I've ever heard it used. Yeah I'm from coastal NC. Morehead City. My Aunts from Wades shore on Shackleford (1880's)used it this way as did the younger of my sisters. Newer uses have apparently arrived. Evolution.
by Bob O'Donnell January 12, 2008