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#ornery — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #ornery, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Interdependence Sunset Sessions - Open Air @ Gestrandet An Der Jannowitzbrücke - 09 Aug feat. 6RAJ, Eleonora, Ornery

    #SESH #6RAJ #Eleonora #Ornery

    sesh.sx/events/12231591

  2. Hey I'm Kassie/Dendril! I specialize in grungy toons, wacky monsters, and everything found in between! I'd love to work on character design, game art, and book illustration for a younger audience with an edge. #portfolioday #illustrator #cartoon #ornery

  3. Hey I'm Kassie/Dendril! I specialize in grungy toons, wacky monsters, and everything found in between! I'd love to work on character design, game art, and book illustration for a younger audience with an edge. #portfolioday #illustrator #cartoon #ornery

  4. Hey I'm Kassie/Dendril! I specialize in grungy toons, wacky monsters, and everything found in between! I'd love to work on character design, game art, and book illustration for a younger audience with an edge. #portfolioday #illustrator #cartoon #ornery

  5. Hey I'm Kassie/Dendril! I specialize in grungy toons, wacky monsters, and everything found in between! I'd love to work on character design, game art, and book illustration for a younger audience with an edge. #portfolioday #illustrator #cartoon #ornery

  6. Hey I'm Kassie/Dendril! I specialize in grungy toons, wacky monsters, and everything found in between! I'd love to work on character design, game art, and book illustration for a younger audience with an edge. #portfolioday #illustrator #cartoon #ornery

  7. (4/4) So I like to think that when Annie Morgan got up in that mountain church in 1933 to sing about “poor ornery people,” she had both meanings in mind. We’re just ordinary folks, you and I, nothing fancy ... and some of us are mean, cantankerous sons-of-guns. Either way, Jesus came for people like us.

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  8. (4/4) So I like to think that when Annie Morgan got up in that mountain church in 1933 to sing about “poor ornery people,” she had both meanings in mind. We’re just ordinary folks, you and I, nothing fancy ... and some of us are mean, cantankerous sons-of-guns. Either way, Jesus came for people like us.

  9. (4/4) So I like to think that when Annie Morgan got up in that mountain church in 1933 to sing about “poor ornery people,” she had both meanings in mind. We’re just ordinary folks, you and I, nothing fancy ... and some of us are mean, cantankerous sons-of-guns. Either way, Jesus came for people like us.

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  10. (3/4) Digging into the OED entry for “ornery” a bit more ... its secondary meaning of “mean, cantankerous, contrary” emerged in the late 19th century. A sample quote from 1849 describes “an old one-horned cow, mighty onnery lookin,” which the OED glosses as “ordinary.” Having known a few old cows, I’m not so sure. But by 1887, a quote about “an onery scamp of a Republican” definitely implies something more.

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  11. (3/4) Digging into the OED entry for “ornery” a bit more ... its secondary meaning of “mean, cantankerous, contrary” emerged in the late 19th century. A sample quote from 1849 describes “an old one-horned cow, mighty onnery lookin,” which the OED glosses as “ordinary.” Having known a few old cows, I’m not so sure. But by 1887, a quote about “an onery scamp of a Republican” definitely implies something more.

  12. (3/4) Digging into the OED entry for “ornery” a bit more ... its secondary meaning of “mean, cantankerous, contrary” emerged in the late 19th century. A sample quote from 1849 describes “an old one-horned cow, mighty onnery lookin,” which the OED glosses as “ordinary.” Having known a few old cows, I’m not so sure. But by 1887, a quote about “an onery scamp of a Republican” definitely implies something more.

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  13. (2/4) As it turns out, “I Wonder As I Wander” has rural roots, too. It was written in 1933 by John Jacob Niles, a folklorist who claimed he heard a girl named Annie Morgan sing a scrap of the song in a church deep in the North Carolina mountains. He later expanded it into a full hymn.

    So ... I wonder if the word “ornery” in 1930s Appalachia had the same meaning as “ornery” from my rural Midwest childhood?

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  14. (2/4) As it turns out, “I Wonder As I Wander” has rural roots, too. It was written in 1933 by John Jacob Niles, a folklorist who claimed he heard a girl named Annie Morgan sing a scrap of the song in a church deep in the North Carolina mountains. He later expanded it into a full hymn.

    So ... I wonder if the word “ornery” in 1930s Appalachia had the same meaning as “ornery” from my rural Midwest childhood?

  15. (2/4) As it turns out, “I Wonder As I Wander” has rural roots, too. It was written in 1933 by John Jacob Niles, a folklorist who claimed he heard a girl named Annie Morgan sing a scrap of the song in a church deep in the North Carolina mountains. He later expanded it into a full hymn.

    So ... I wonder if the word “ornery” in 1930s Appalachia had the same meaning as “ornery” from my rural Midwest childhood?

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  16. More Christmas carol trivia! (1/4)

    Have you ever noticed that unusual word in “I Wonder As I Wander” ... which says Jesus came “for poor ornery people like you and like I”?

    The OED defines “ornery” as “ordinary,” a regional form dating from the 1700s in the American South. But in rural Nebraska, where I grew up, it meant “bad-tempered,” often in reference to animals: “Watch out for that bull, he’s ornery.” You might call a grumpy old guy an “ornery cuss.”

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery

  17. More Christmas carol trivia! (1/4)

    Have you ever noticed that unusual word in “I Wonder As I Wander” ... which says Jesus came “for poor ornery people like you and like I”?

    The OED defines “ornery” as “ordinary,” a regional form dating from the 1700s in the American South. But in rural Nebraska, where I grew up, it meant “bad-tempered,” often in reference to animals: “Watch out for that bull, he’s ornery.” You might call a grumpy old guy an “ornery cuss.”

  18. More Christmas carol trivia! (1/4)

    Have you ever noticed that unusual word in “I Wonder As I Wander” ... which says Jesus came “for poor ornery people like you and like I”?

    The OED defines “ornery” as “ordinary,” a regional form dating from the 1700s in the American South. But in rural Nebraska, where I grew up, it meant “bad-tempered,” often in reference to animals: “Watch out for that bull, he’s ornery.” You might call a grumpy old guy an “ornery cuss.”

    #Christmas #IWonderAsIWander #ornery