More strange words. At my daughter's graduation ceremony in Canterbury Cathedral Don and I were fortunate enough to be given tickets by a friend who worked at the University. This ensured us two seats close to where all the action was, as I said afterwards we sat among the "nobs". Not that any of them spoke to us so we could not say we were" hob-nobbing" with them. I was ruminating on these words. I suppose they originally came from the word "nobility". Whereas "snobs" is quite a different kettle of fish. "Snobs" implies someone not pleasant who considers himself superior to the lower orders and shows it, someone who is copying the ways of persons he considers
superior. (See Hyacinth Bucket or Ronnie Barker in the famous sketch with John Clees and Ronnie Corbett)
When I was a child (a long time ago) I was told to take my shoes to the snobs to be soled and heeled. The snob was a slang word for a cobbler. I wonder how that came about?
I love the infinite variety of the English language.
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