Posted on 01/27/2011 8:29:52 AM PST by sukhoi-30mki
Nimrod was central to our defence against Russia's fleet of nuclear submarines
The North Sea has not been abandined to the Russians.
I’ve had the good fortune to see this plane fly.
It is an amazing aircraft and highly maneuverable for its size.
The Muslims in the UK and USA are a bigger threat than Putin.
I should have scrolled down first...you beat me to it by quite a bit.
Once the US Navy’s P8 comes on line, the UK could pick up some used P3’s relatively cheap, no?
Great minds do think alike
You know, back in the 50s/60s when I started to read Hunting magazines, a common nickname for a hunter was ‘nimrod’... people like Jack O'Connor, Elmer Keith, Ted Trueblood, or Byron Dalrymple would toss this term out as a non critical description of one who stalked game....taken from the biblical King, Nimrod the Hunter, who built the tower of babel.
I do not know when, why, or where the first depiction of a ‘Nimrod’, as a moron occurred...but it denigrates hunters everywhere....
It is an amazing aircraft and highly maneuverable for its size.
All the more remarkable since its wing is inherited directly from the much-maligned De Havilland Comet, which first flew in 1949!
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It is in your post:
taken from the biblical King, Nimrod the Hunter, who built the tower of babel
.
but that is not, where I believe, the current use came from...I believe it is because it is a funny sounding name...that probably translates to bow and arrow if you think of it(nimble??? rod??? no? whatever.)...and back in the early 60s it was not considered a denigrating term. And I do not think those who use the term today are biblical scholars.
Word Origin & History
Nimrod
“great hunter,” 1712, in ref. to the biblical son of Cush, referred to (Gen. x.8-9) as “a mighty hunter before the Lord.” It came to mean “geek, klutz” by 1983 in teenager slang, for unknown reasons. (Amateur theories include its occasional use in “Bugs Bunny” cartoon episodes featuring rabbit-hunting Elmer Fudd as a foil; its possible ironic use, among hunters, for a clumsy member of their fraternity; or a stereotype of deer hunters by the non-hunting population in the U.S. Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
Cite This Source
http://www.simplyplanes.co.uk/hawker_siddeley_nimrod.shtml
I cant cut and paste....go to the 5th section and they call the Nimrod the Mighty Hunter.
and yeah I remember that particular Bugs Bunny toon...and that probably tipped it over the edge to mean a ‘maroon’ as bugs would say...
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