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Your chance to receive a FREE Walmart - Blackstone Original 4-Burner

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Walmart Shipment)
Mon Apr 7 04:00:22 2025

Date: Mon, 7 Apr 2025 09:58:04 +0200
From: "Walmart Shipment" <WalmartWinner@rumpkoozi.pro>
Reply-To: "Walmart Confirmation" <WalmartConfirmation@rumpkoozi.pro>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>

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Your chance to receive a FREE Walmart - Blackstone Original 4-Burner

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ard non-slang usage appeared in print as early as 1903 in England and 1904 in the United States, when novelist Desmond Coke used it in his college story of Oxford life, Sandford of Merton: "There's a stunning flapper". In 1907, English actor George Graves explained it to Americans as theatrical slang for acrobatic young female stage performers. The flapper was also known as a dancer, who danced like a bird—flapping her arms while doing the Charleston move. This move became quite a competitive dance during this era.

By 1908, newspapers as serious as The Times used the term, although with careful explanation: "A 'flapper', we may explain, is a young lady who has not yet been promoted to long frocks and the wearing of her hair 'up'". In April 1908, the fashion section of London's The Globe and Traveller contained a sketch entitled "The Dress of the Young Girl" with the following explanation:

Americans, and those fortunate English folk whose money and status permit them to go in freely for slang terms ... call the subject of these lines the 'flapper.' The appropriateness of this term does not move me to such whole-hearted admiration of the amazing powers of enriching our language which the Americans modestly acknowledge they possess ...,  in fact, would scarcely merit the honour of a moment of my attention, but for the fact that I seek in vain for any other expression that is understood to signify that important young person, the maiden of some sixteen years.

The sketch is of a girl in a frock with a long skirt, "which has the waistline quite high and semi-Empire, ... quite untrimmed, its plainness being relieved by a sash knotted carelessly aro

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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">ard non-slang usage appeared in print as early as 1903 in England and 1904 in the United States, when novelist Desmond Coke used it in his college story of Oxford life, Sandford of Merton: &quot;There&#39;s a stunning flapper&quot;. In 1907, English actor George Graves explained it to Americans as theatrical slang for acrobatic young female stage performers. The flapper was also known as a dancer, who danced like a bird&mdash;flapping her arms while doing the Charleston move. This move became quite a competitive dance during this era. By 1908, newspapers as serious as The Times used the term, although with careful explanation: &quot;A &#39;flapper&#39;, we may explain, is a young lady who has not yet been promoted to long frocks and the wearing of her hair &#39;up&#39;&quot;. In April 1908, the fashion section of London&#39;s The Globe and Traveller contained a sketch entitled &quot;The Dress of the Young Girl&quot; with the following explanation: Americans, and those fortunate English folk whose money and status permit them to go in freely for slang terms ... call the subject of these lines the &#39;flapper.&#39; The appropriateness of this term does not move me to such whole-hearted admiration of the amazing powers of enriching our language which the Americans modestly acknowledge they possess ...,  in fact, would scarcely merit the honour of a moment of my attention, but for the fact that I seek in vain for any other expression that is understood to signify that important young person, the maiden of some sixteen years. The sketch is of a girl in a frock with a long skirt, &quot;which has the waistline quite high and semi-Empire, ... quite untrimmed, its plainness being relieved by a sash knotted carelessly aro</div>
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