2013年9月18日 星期三

Gue, jibe, consommateur, derisive, deride, wobbly, sharp elbows

 Students of the changing nature of Britain’s establishment have relished the meltdown of courtesies as the grandees exchanged poisonous glances and frosty put-downs.


  frosty put-down

 Many of her pithiest put-downs were directed at her own side: "U-turn if you want to," she told the Conservatives as unemployment passed 2m. "The lady's not for turning." She told George Bush senior: "This is no time to go wobbly!" Ronald Reagan was her soulmate but lacked her sharp elbows and hostility to deficits.

Critics Deride Medvedev Overhauls
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev promised sweeping steps to open up the political system and fight corruption. But the measures were largely dismissed by Kremlin critics.


London mayor takes aim at French with cake jibe

The mayor says Britain would always beat France in attracting big business as their people have an instinctive flare for innovation.



Davos – London mayor Boris Johnson took a gastronomic pot shot at the French on Thursday over attracting big business, saying Britain would always beat France -- using cakes as ammunition.

Speaking on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, the eccentric former journalist teased President Nicolas Sarkozy for "seeking to have designs on London's pre-eminence in financial services".

The French leader gave the keynote opening address at the Davos conference on Wednesday, pledging to re-design the global economic architecture when his country takes over the Group of 20 (G20) presidency next year.

"Well I say to him that he should look to the safety of his cake industry," he said, citing the case of a London cake and pudding maker, Gue, which he said sold five million pounds' worth of its products to France every year.

The "genius" of the British company was to give itself a foreign-sounding name, fooling the French -- who are notoriously proud of their gastronomic tradition, he said.

"The French consommateur would not readily be persuaded to buy 'Waltham Forest cake,' and so what did they call it? 'Gue' -- thus bamboozling the poor people of France into thinking that it was Austrian cake.

"That instinctive flare for innovation, for value-added, that means in my view London will always be the place for cutting-edge service industries," in particular for the finance sector, he added.

He concluded: "To the French I say: Let them eat cake" -- the English version of "Qu'ils mangent de la brioche," a reported put-down by 18th century French Queen Marie Antoinette when told that the peasants had no bread to eat.

Johnson was speaking at one of the numerous corporate-sponsored events held on the sidelines of the annual WEF meeting, which brings together some 30 national leaders with 2,500 business and cultural chiefs.

AFP / Expatica



 法新社瑞士達佛斯28日電:倫敦市長強生(Boris Johnson)今天就吸引龐大商機對美食王國法國發表一番評論,表示英國總是會擊敗法國─蛋糕就是砲彈。

 法國總統沙柯吉(Nicolas Sarkozy)在瑞士達佛斯(Davos)世界經濟論壇(World Economic Forum)發表開幕致詞,矢言明年由法國接任20國集團(G20)主席國時,將重新設計全球經濟框架。

 前職是記者的強生揶揄沙柯吉,他說:「嗯,依我看,他應該注意其蛋糕業的安全。」強生意指倫敦蛋糕和布丁製造商Gue每年在法國創造500萬英鎊(逾800萬美元)商機。

 強生表示,這家英國公司的「天才」之處就在於取了個外國名字,愚弄以美食傳統自豪的法國人。

 他說:「法國顧客才不會欣然去購買店名叫做Waltham Forest的蛋糕,所以他們怎麼取名呢?Gue─迷惑可憐的法國人,讓他們以為買的是奧地利蛋糕。」

 強生說:「這是創新、附加價值的能力,我覺得倫敦將永遠站在服務業的尖端。」他補充說,尤其是在金融業方面。

gibe jibe (jīb) pronunciation
also

v., gibed, also jibed, gib·ing, jib·ing, gibes, jibes. v.intr.
To make taunting, heckling, or jeering remarks.

v.tr.
To deride with taunting remarks.

n.
A derisive remark.

[Possibly from obsolete French giber, to handle roughly, play, from Old French.]
deride
(dĭ-rīd') pronunciation
tr.v., -rid·ed, -rid·ing, -rides.
To speak of or treat with contemptuous mirth. See synonyms at ridicule.
[Latin dērīdēre : dē-, de- + rīdēre, to laugh at.]
derider de·rid'er n.
deridingly de·rid'ing·ly adv.giber gib'er n.
gibingly gib'ing·ly adv.


 最後強生以18世紀法國皇后瑪莉安東尼(Marie Antoinette)聽到農民沒有麵包可吃時據稱曾說過的話作結語,他說道:「法國人,讓他們吃蛋糕吧!」

Gue
Frequency: (330)
(number of times this surname appears in a sample database of 88.7 million names, representing one third of the 1997 US population)
French (Gué): topographic name for someone who lived near a ford, from Old French wad ‘ford’, ‘crossing place’.
GIVEN NAMES: French 5%. Andre, Giraud.

consumer
Français (French)
n. - (gén) consommateur, abonné
idioms:
  • consumer durables bien durable
  • consumer goods produits de consommation
  • consumer society société de consommation
derisive Pronunciation(adjective) Abusing vocally; expressing contempt or ridicule.
Synonyms:gibelike, jeering, mocking, taunting
Usage:Dirk Stroeve was one of those persons whom…you cannot think of without derisive laughter or an embarrassed shrug of the shoulders.



 put-down noun
informal
a remark intended to humiliate or criticize someone: a clever put-down of Tory supporters

 wobbly
adjective (wobblier, wobbliest)

  • tending to move unsteadily from side to side:the car had a wobbly wheel
  • (of a person) weak and unsteady from illness, tiredness, or anxiety: she still felt a bit wobbly on her legs
  • uncertain, wavering, or insecure:the evening got off to a wobbly start
  • (of a person or voice) tending to move out of tone or slightly vary in pitch: a wobbly soprano
  • (of a line or handwriting) not straight or regular.

noun

[in singular] British informal
  • a fit of temper or panic:my daughter threw a wobbly when I wouldn’t let her play
  • (the wobblies) a fit of panic:the driver was having an attack of the wobblies

Derivatives


wobbliness

noun

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