(bez virsraksta) @ 12:18
The Word of the Day for August 12 is:
Darby and Joan \dar-bee-and-JOAN\ noun
: a happily married usually elderly couple
Example sentence:
Mr. and Mrs. Goodman, the village's Darby and Joan, were often seen walking hand in hand along the beach.
Did you know?
"Old Darby, with Joan by his side, / You've often regarded with wonder: / He's dropsical, she is sore-eyed, / Yet they're never happy asunder." Thus ran the lines of a poem published in 1735 under the title "The Joys of Love Never Forgot: A Song." By the mid-1700s, the elderly couple introduced in that poem had become symbolic of devoted couples. According to some sources, the verse's author was an amateur poet named Henry Woodfall and its inspiration was a real-life couple: a printer named John Darby (who was Woodfall's employer) and his wife Joan. Whoever they were originally, a more modern version of the two later appeared in a song titled simply "Darby and Joan," a collaboration of Frederic Weatherly and James Molloy.
Darby and Joan \dar-bee-and-JOAN\ noun
: a happily married usually elderly couple
Example sentence:
Mr. and Mrs. Goodman, the village's Darby and Joan, were often seen walking hand in hand along the beach.
Did you know?
"Old Darby, with Joan by his side, / You've often regarded with wonder: / He's dropsical, she is sore-eyed, / Yet they're never happy asunder." Thus ran the lines of a poem published in 1735 under the title "The Joys of Love Never Forgot: A Song." By the mid-1700s, the elderly couple introduced in that poem had become symbolic of devoted couples. According to some sources, the verse's author was an amateur poet named Henry Woodfall and its inspiration was a real-life couple: a printer named John Darby (who was Woodfall's employer) and his wife Joan. Whoever they were originally, a more modern version of the two later appeared in a song titled simply "Darby and Joan," a collaboration of Frederic Weatherly and James Molloy.
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