Errant thought from a while back:
"I remember when mice used to have balls."
.
I'd been trying to remember this word: Boggart, which I once learned from a Susan Cooper book, as I could imagine a boggart being behind the weird bug-related mystery I've been trying to solve.
After a while, the supernatural explanations seemed as likely as any others I came up with.
"These bugs must have the power of invisibility!"
"Maybe they aren't invisible bugs; maybe they are ghosts."
I remembered a mischievous supernatural creature that was a boggart, but it took me a while to remember the word.
Fittingly, it turns out that boggart and bug even share the same etymology!
"I remember when mice used to have balls."
.
I'd been trying to remember this word: Boggart, which I once learned from a Susan Cooper book, as I could imagine a boggart being behind the weird bug-related mystery I've been trying to solve.
After a while, the supernatural explanations seemed as likely as any others I came up with.
"These bugs must have the power of invisibility!"
"Maybe they aren't invisible bugs; maybe they are ghosts."
I remembered a mischievous supernatural creature that was a boggart, but it took me a while to remember the word.
Fittingly, it turns out that boggart and bug even share the same etymology!
no subject
Date: 2021-10-02 05:51 pm (UTC)From:I also didn't realize that "bugs" as in "Bugs Bunny" meant "crazy"...
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/how-hardened-gangsters-got-the-cute-name-bugsy
“bugsy” came from comparisons to someone who’d been driven insane by bugs. To call someone “bugs,” or refer to a person as “bugsy” was to call them crazy, or unstable.