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01-15-2009, 09:12 PM | #21 |
Still Watching My Back
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Re: New and Improved
herf doesn't stand for anything, except getting together with friends and having a smoke. It is a word that was created for the event as far as I know.
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01-15-2009, 10:23 PM | #23 | |
Adjusting to the Life
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Re: New and Improved
Welcome Curly Cut!
Quote:
"For all us newbies who don't spring from the head of MotheMan with a full complement of cigar knowledge and wisdom, I found the answer to a question I posed during a recent chat. DISCLAIMER - this is NOT my work, someone else put it together, I take no credit whatsoever for the truths or untruths therein. That said, here is what I found: What Is A Herf? Herf? What the heck IS a herf? You're new to this cigar business; you're surfing from site to site, and this word keeps cropping up- 'herf'. Lot's of people write 'herf', but nobody tells to what on earth 'herf' means. Well, we will! It's a term coined in the alt.smokers.cigars newsgroup, way back in 1996. 'Herf' caught on, and has been part of the cigar lexicon ever since. Below is the definitive posting at ACS on the origin of 'herf'... HERF - EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The un-official word of ASC is Herf. Herf is a unique part of speech. It can be correctly used as a noun, a verb, an adjective, an adverb, an infinitive, a prefix, a suffix and an explicative. The arcane word "herf" first entered the ASC lexicon on November 21, 1996, and was quickly elevated to frenetic and common use by ASCers. The Prince of Skeeves exposed ASC to the word herf in a casual posting to the group... however it was ASCers, as a budding collective, who took the word and made it divine. Herf is now virulently spreading to worldwide common use as hip cigar parlance. HERF - CHRONOLOGY: As for the origin of Herf, here's the History of Herf (it's a matter of record on DejaNews)... The word "herf" first appeared on ASC... -------- [post quoted below] ---------------------------------- It was November 21, 1996... the elections were over, and "herf" unceremoniously beams into our lexicon... And, you were there (here's the exact post)... ************************************************** **** Subject: worst cigars IMHO From: aloysius@gte.net (Prince of Skeeves) 1996/11/21 Message-ID: <571i9b$ht4@news3.gte.net> Newsgroups: alt.smokers.cigars I bought a Canaria d'Oro(sic?)Robusto out of curiousity and it was really a horrible, stale,grassy smoke with a peed-on taste. I gave it about 2 inches before I put it out. Also, anything Macanudo...I tried several when I first began smoking cigars and found them all to be very bland and almost impossible to herf, they were so tightly wrapped. I think the list of `Mediocre Smokes' for most folks would be huge. ************************************************** **** And, the voices of ASCers cry out immediately... saying, "what is this _herf_ thing?" In answer... on November 23, Prince of Skeeves elucidates, Message-ID: <5770op$cqu@news1.gte.net>: To `herf' is to draw on a cigar. The voices of ASC follow in chorus: "this herf thing... it is good" And, in a grand gesture, full grace is shared... Subject: an early definition of the word... From: aloysius@gte.net (Prince of Skeeves) 1997/07/11 Message-ID: <5q5f19$dfa$1@news12.gte.net> Newsgroups: alt.smokers.cigars EVERYONE MUST HERF The first time I heard the word `herf' and recognized it's potential for the enrichment of my vocabulary was in junior college in Clyde, Texas in 1982 from a blueblood derelict friend of my named Stu. In the context of the time it was used to describe the ungainly and humorous facial contortion required to deeply draw on a large, hand-rolled cigarette of unknown filling while driving a motor vehicle and keeping an eye peeled for the Callahan County sheriff. Later I found the term `herf' described nicely the method for getting a good mouthful of tasty smoke from my favorite cigars.(Padron and HDM Rothschilds) S. delaVega Prince of Skeeves -------- [end quoted post] ---------------------------------- So, that's the herf story... on 11/21/96 "Prince of Skeeves" (whoever he/she/it is/was) introduced our newsgroup to its very own beloved word... And, as a bonus... HERF LEVITY: Herf... a word which is now spreading to virtually all corners of the cigar world... thanks to the likes of the many and varied distinguished herfing enthusiasts (herfnicks)... such as: the good Dr. Miguelit (used on his many national radio interviews), Mr. Lew Rothman (used proudly and prominently on JR's Winter catalog issue's front cover), ASC elder Mr. Bob Curtis (used liberally all over the ICG website), the Hon. Steven Saka (used strategically at least four times in the course of the 1997 New Hampshire state senatorial debate and once as an invective following the debate's broadcast, which, btw, was televised on CSPAN-3 to over a half-billion viewers worldwide, including the space shuttle mission crew), Connie Whittager, perky weatherwoman on Montgomery, Alabama's WKKG-TV (used to describe the fog which paralyzed suburban roadways for two straight days in April 1997... in an interview on the Weather Channel, she explained, "...motorists were advised to avoid the western beltway and all lakeside arteries due to a stationary fog bank thicker than a hundred hounddogs herfin' Hondurans in a hayloft", and by Jorge Jesus Delgado, Jr., now departed, (who ardently pleaded to "herf a cigar" before his execution in the Texas death-house in October 1997)... ...just to mention a few of the notables! PS: Remember... November 21 is World Herfing Day!!! Sorry you asked, huh?<g> Regards, ...JC So now you know the meaning of 'herf'! HOPE THIS HELPS - LONG LIVE GEORGE BURNS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Aaron11-29-2005, 02:43 PM I dabble in etymology (study of the origin of words) and have been Googling around for an authoritative answer to the origin of herf and cigar. herf is a mutation of the word huff. huff at Dictionary.com c.1450, apparently imitative of exhaling. Extended sense of "bluster with indignation" is attested from 1599. Huffy "ready to take offense" is from 1680. (http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?...earchmode=none) We tell our kids stories about the three pigs and the wolf who huffed and puffed. A Pittsburghese (http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/...ittsburgh.html) website has the following: Ignernt-Here's a word guaranteed to confuse any new arrival to Pittsburgh. To everyone else the word ignorant(whence ignernt derives) means uninformed or lacking in knowledge. But in Pittsburgh, ignernt means rude. Recall how Archie Bunker used to pronounce words, sometimes dropping and sometimes inserting "r's" where they never were. I think there's a strong chance that huff became herf. It sounded funnier to say herf, and so it stuck." |
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