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Red Sea Sharks: "Keep calm young shaver"...?

rodney
Member
#1 · Posted: 27 Jun 2011 14:54
On p.53 of The Red Sea Sharks, Captain Haddock says, "Keep calm young shaver", which seems like one of the most peculiar lines in The Adventures of Tintin.
Admittedly I love how it leads to another piece of humour for the story!!
Obviously I interpret this as being an expression for Tintin being a young man who doesn't shave as yet or has only just started to shave on account of his age.
Has this expression been used in any other forms of print?
Can anyone trace its origin's?
Is it a sailor's term and therefore suitable for the Captain to say?
Is it something the English translators have placed in the story or was it faithfully adapted from the French text?

Cheers,

Rod
jock123
Moderator
#2 · Posted: 27 Jun 2011 17:13
rodney:
one of the most peculiar lines in The Adventures of Tintin

It shows how times change, because I would have assumed that this was such a common expression that it wouldn't have merited a second look! Presumably it has fallen out of fashion?

It will certainly be found in all sorts of writing; having the Captain say it wasn't because it was a nautical thing, it's just an expression which means "someone young".

The etymology of the expression is (as for so many words and phrases) uncertain.
It could be a reference to young children being a chip off the old block, a "shaving" of their parents - and might explain why some people use it for children regardless of gender.
Others connect it to shaving, and make it male (although as it can be used for very young children, that seems a bit of a back-formation).
A third (and in some ways the most convincing) origin is that it comes from the Romany chava - which is also a word for a young boy.
This latter word is also said to be the origin of the British slang word "chav", now mostly used as a term of abuse for someone thought to be poor and lacking in taste.

It's unlikely to be a word-for-word transcription of the French, but I imagine that there is a similar expression there too.
Andrew
Member
#3 · Posted: 27 Jun 2011 18:14
A lot of the younger generation in my experience have very little knowledge of expressions, phrases and idioms such as this. I speak as a 29-year old.
jasperjava
Member
#4 · Posted: 28 Jun 2011 03:56
In French, I think the Captain calls Tintin "Moussaillon", which is a term for a young apprentice sailor.

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