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01/09/2007

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k.

Oh, I loves me some Old Norse, and I loves me some sewing. Crotchety old E.V. Gordon in his "Intro to Old Norse" tells me rifa means "to tear," but who's to say that makes the ety wrong? After all, how many quick-and-dirty hems have I torn out and redone properly?I will take up the banner of "riv" with ya. Much more elegant than the other words I use for my temporary fixes.

mickey

As a costumer, I am forever 'rivving things up'. Sounds much better than what my actors call it...

Anonymous

I "rivved" the hem of a pair of jeans a few hours before flying out on holiday last week. Didn't have time to wash them first or get the machine out so just hand sewed them pretty roughly with the intent of doing a better job later. Didn't know there was a term for it though!

Nicki C.

I love new words and more importantly ones that I can use. Thanks for the revival ;)

Anonymous

Oh. So I'm not actually a sewist? Now I have to call myself a rivist! Great!

Valerie

I riv regularly. Now I know what to call it! :)

E

Cf "rivet", maybe? Could be the same word - just punching something together so it will hold?

Nora

A very useful and pleasant word, almost onomatopoeic. (I can just imagine it as an "action indicator" word in a comic or manga.) Now we'll see the TRUE POWER of Dressaday (besides the number of people sewing their own dresses): by how quickly "riv" enters common parlance. Bwahahahaaa!P.S. I took the quiz, and I think I may be becoming an oldie: I do spend obsessive amounts of time in stationery stores, and I mend things and polish my shoes, and I have been known to save string (I also carry handkerchiefs, which I was surprised they didn't mention). But I don't get the bit about Japanese restaurants; can't you be old AND Japanese? Or just, you know, not xenophobic?

oracle

I also love stationery, but I refuse to give up my udon soup.

bonnie-ann black

when my boys were small, my sister and i used to make their halloween costumes - usually last minute -- sewing things together by hand. once, while sewing a hand made Superman "S" onto a blue sweatshirt, my sister exasperatedly exclaimed: "You're taking forever! Stop being so neat and do some stupid sewing!" i wish that we had the word "riv" instead!

Joyella

I love what you've got going on here. I just added you to my blogroll and intend to keep coming back!

Anonymous

OMG,Erin, thanks for the link to the Oldie! Did anyone happen to read the archived article about the Cambridge rapist? He got caught though so maybe he was just a rivvist...Chris

Anejo

Finally, people might know what I mean when I say I've rivved something!It's still in use in some parts of Liverpool, if my father's family - sailors for as long back as we can tell - is anything to go by.

Anonymous

I wonder if it's related to the nautical expression about reefing a sail.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reefing

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