I had a tough time with a slang term for N. I was unimpressed
with some of the words and phrases I found and so I settled for nobby. It’s one of the few words on the
list so far that I have never used personally and can’t recall ever having heard
it used before either.
I am not a fashionable person. My sister threatens me all
the time about submitting my name to that make-over show. I wear things that
are comfortable, clean, maybe wrinkled, but decent. I wore professional style
clothes when I taught but I was able to keep it to a business casual level:
khakis, polos, and a few skirts and blouses.
Since I’ve been unemployed, my wardrobe shrank quite a bit
and I tended towards my comfort clothes: jeans and tee shirts. Looking decent
is different to me than looking fashionable and for as long as I can remember
decent won over fashion any day of the week.
When I was hired a few weeks back, I had a quite the panic
attack because I really didn’t have anything left in my closet that could pass
muster for professional. The polos and khakis I wore in my last years of
teacher are what I wore to run around town in, to pick up bags of potting soil
at Home Depot, to bake in – do I need to even say how grungy they have become?
Dragging Ashleigh and Cyra with me to the mall to pick out a
few outfits to get me through the first few months of the new job was critical.
I know what I am comfortable in, but I have no clue as to what might go
together – and have you seen the spring colors? Neon pink and orange, lime
greens and Caribbean blues. And what happened
to just plain solids? Everything is patterned; everything has doo-dads and
froo-froo on them. I can’t stand the stuff!! I wanted to find plain things that
would easily mix and match. Ashleigh and Cyra insisted on pops of color and no
khakis!
An hour later, with Ashleigh and Cyra by my side, I managed
to pick out a number of interchangeable outfits. And I kept within my limited
budget. I won’t claim to be nobby
yet.
Now if only I could find out where Ashleigh hid my khakis.
Nobby is an
adjective from the 1850s that means fashionable.
Example: Nora wasn’t
especially nobby, but nearly
everyone noticed when she started wearing shoes from Nine West.
This post has been brought to you by the Letter N and the fine folks at Blogging A to Z. Check out more A to Z blogs here!
:)
ReplyDeleteI'm not even slightly nobby. More like slobby, which isn't a word but, it's closer to what I am.
ReplyDeleteShawn at Laughing at Life 2
I think slobby works just fine. So much easier to spell anyway than slovenly. And it's a bit more fun to say!
DeleteHmmmm... I've never heard this one before. I love how you're expanding my vocabulary.
ReplyDeleteHugs!
Valerie
I try. That's what makes me a good friend. I am always out to help improve your life in small ways.
DeleteNobby is a great word! Love it. FYI - I'm not very nobby either. Comfy is best. ;0)
ReplyDeleteI'm with you there! Comfy is the way to go!
DeleteNever heard that one. It made me think of Dobby from Harry Potter :) I can definitely say I am NOT nobby!
ReplyDeleteI totally thought of Dobby first too!! When I was typing the post up I kept hitting the d instead of the n!
DeleteI shall have to teach this word to my children tomorrow. They will love it, especially my 11 year old who adores fashion!
ReplyDeleteI dress more for comfort than fashion. I guess my kids would say I'm nobby, hehe.
ReplyDeleteOops, I meant they would say I'm NOT nobby.
DeleteInteresting concept for your posts. I am going to start following your blog so I will be back to read when I have more time.
ReplyDeleteDenise at Organization and Inspiration for Fellow Writers, participant of A to Z Blogging Challenge
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