Thanks Bruce and Shel. I have never heard of the Japanese origin of
scosh, but I recognize that many US servicemen were stationed in Japan
after WWII and certainly during the Korean War. (My father and uncle
were among them.)
Regards, Bob S.
On 5/25/05, Bruce Dayton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
I have this hunch that the word came about during WWII - the Japanese
word sukoshi (pronounced just about like scosh), means "little" or
"small amount" - my thinking is that the GI's picked it up from there
and it wormed it's way into American english.
--
Best regards,
Bruce
Wednesday, May 25,
.. is usually considered to be a scosh smaller than a scosh.
Shel
> [Original Message]
> From: Shel Belinkoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To:
> Date: 5/25/2005 8:47:16 AM
> Subject: Re: PAW: Etude in Soft
>
> Both terms mean about the same, although smidgeon (sometimes
Both terms mean about the same, although smidgeon (sometimes spelled
smidgen) means a tiny, almost undetectable amount, is usually a scosh.
Shel
> [Original Message]
> From: E.R.N. Reed
> >A "scosh" is a term that means "just a little," but by no definite
amount.
> >
> >
> >
> How does it r
Scosh (or skosh) was picked up by American servicemen around the time of
the Korean War. It's derived from the Japanese word "sukoshi." The first
recorded use of the word was in 1951. It remained a chiefly military term
through the 1950s and '60s, and spread into more mainstream usage in the
'60s
>
> From: "E.R.N. Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: 2005/05/25 Wed PM 12:31:44 GMT
> To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
> Subject: Re: PAW: Etude in Soft
>
> Shel Belinkoff wrote:
>
> >A "scosh" is a term that means "just a little,"
Shel Belinkoff wrote:
A "scosh" is a term that means "just a little," but by no definite amount.
How does it relate to a "smidgen"? More, less or about the same?
ERNR
genuinely interested
On 5/25/05, Boris Liberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I thought you were the anti-focus league leader, Frank :)... Kidding,
> sorry...
Well, I wouldn't say I'm the leader, but focus isn't as important to
me as it seems to be for others. To put it another way, a strong
enough image that miss
Hah! It was a term made popular in advertising for blue jeans as the
baby boom generation began to get older. The jeans moved away from
the lean cowboy cut to a 'scosh more room' in the waist, hips, and
thighs...a fuller cut in the fabric.
Regards, Bob S.
On 5/24/05, Shel Belinkoff <[EMAIL PROT
A "scosh" is a term that means "just a little," but by no definite amount.
Shel
> [Original Message]
> From: Boris Liberman
> Shel, what is it "scosh less"???
Hi!
Doesn't really work for me, Boris.
It's not so much the softness of focus, but what the light seems to be
doing that I find bothersome. Hard to explain, but it seems that
there's light "coming around the edges" of some of the objects in the
frame, like the arm and shirt of the subject.
I'
Hi!
It's just that "glow" that I find so enticing. Perhaps a scosh less might
be an improvement, but as it is, it lends an ethereal and diaphanous
quality to the photo, moving it away from the more typical photo and giving
the image a sense, or feel, beyond the subject matter and composition.
Hi!
Whooo, boy! I can't even read the headlines on that paper, it's so
soft! ;-)
Neither can I! ;-)
Boris
7:24 +0200
From: Boris Liberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
Subject: PAW: Etude in Soft
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1;
format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Hi!
http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=19
Hi Frank,
It's just that "glow" that I find so enticing. Perhaps a scosh less might
be an improvement, but as it is, it lends an ethereal and diaphanous
quality to the photo, moving it away from the more typical photo and giving
the image a sense, or feel, beyond the subject matter and compositio
On 5/24/05, Boris Liberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi!
>
> http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=191069
>
> Please be brutal. But honest :).
>
> Today I took a soft lens for my project shooting...
>
Doesn't really work for me, Boris.
It's not so much the softness of focus, but
AM
> Subject: PAW: Etude in Soft
>
> Hi!
>
> http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=191069
>
> Please be brutal. But honest :).
>
> Today I took a soft lens for my project shooting...
>
> Boris
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 5/24/2005 11:20:27 AM Pacific Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Boris Liberman wrote:
Hi!
http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=191069
Please be brutal. But honest :).
Today I took a soft lens for my project shooting...
Bori
In a message dated 5/24/2005 11:20:27 AM Pacific Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Boris Liberman wrote:
> Hi!
>
> http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=191069
>
> Please be brutal. But honest :).
>
> Today I took a soft lens for my project shooting...
>
> Boris
Whooo, boy! I c
Boris Liberman wrote:
Hi!
http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=191069
Please be brutal. But honest :).
Today I took a soft lens for my project shooting...
Boris
Whooo, boy! I can't even read the headlines on that paper, it's so
soft! ;-)
keith whaley
Hi!
http://www.photoforum.ru/rate/photo.php?photo_id=191069
Please be brutal. But honest :).
Today I took a soft lens for my project shooting...
Boris
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