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On Apr 9, 6:06*am, wrote:
What a martinet. Um, a "martinet," Gracie? *Hang on, you don't actually mean to say "martian" or "maraschino" or "canard a l'orange" or something, do you...? Here Junior, let me help you out, or more correctly let the Wiki help you out "In English, the term martinet is usually used not in reference to the whip itself, but rather him who would use it, a person who demands strict adherence to set rules, especially such a person in the military. This sense of the word reputedly comes from the name of Jean Martinet, Inspector General of the army of Louis XIV and thus would be etymologically only by accident related to the earlier sense. In an extended sense, a martinet is any person for whom a strict adherence to rules and etiquette is paramount: martinets often use etiquette and other rules as an excuse to trump ethics, to the point that etiquette loses its ethical ground. The Ugandan dictator Idi Amin was famously described as a "strutting martinet" by Time in 1977.[1] " Dave |
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