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Etymology
The origin of the term "G-string" is obscure. Since the 19th century, the term geestring referred to the string which held the loincloth of Native Americans [1] and later referred to the narrow loincloth itself. William Safire in his Ode on a G-String quoted the usage of the word "G-string" for loincloth by Harper's Magazine 15 years after Beadle's and suggested that the magazine confused the word with the musical term G-string (i.e., the string for the G note). Safire also mentions the opinion of linguist Robert Hendrickson that G (or gee) stands for groin, which was a taboo word at these times.[2] Edgar Rice Burroughs dressed his created novel-character, Tarzan, in a G-string for first time in his book The Son of Tarzan (1914) in chapter 26.[3] However, Korak, son of Tarzan, used a G-string before his father Tarzan did in the same book (chapter 20).[4] |
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![]() Maar ik weet halfvier bijna zeker want ik moest mijn concert ervoor afzeggen ![]() |
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Fizzle en Sann en wie er verder ook nog maar mee thee wil drinken morgen:
ik ben waarschijnlijk rond half 4 in Utrecht. Misschien een half uurtje eerder, misschien een half uurtje later. Hangt van mijn repetitie af. Maar ik zal jullie sms'en op het moment dat ik in Tiel in de trein naar utrecht stap, goed? ![]() |
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