Talk:Dingbat (disambiguation)
Latest comment: 17 years ago by Jwy in topic Dab Manual of Style changes
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editIn the UK a dingbat is a puzzle, where a word is represented using letters and fonts. Some popular examples are:
o er t o - painless operation
GR 12" AVE - one foot in the grave
gesg segg gegs gges - scrambled eggs
k k c c u u t t s s word word word word - too stuck up for words
poFISHnd - big fish in a small pond
Dab Manual of Style changes
editI plan to radically change this page to match WP:MOSDAB and am saving the original here:
- A dingbat is an ornament or spacer used in typesetting, sometimes more formally known as a "printer's ornament"
- Dingbat is also a slang term, used to describe someone who has a silly, foolish, or clownish demeanor. It was a favorite insult of the fictional character Archie Bunker in the 1970s television show All in the Family (particularly when addressing his wife, Edith).
- Cartoonist George Herriman had a newspaper comic strip called "The Dingbat Family", as it was originally of a small size so that printers could use it to fill space on the comics page like a dingbat. "The Dingbat Family" was an ancestor of Herriman's most famous creation, "Krazy Kat". The comic strip may have influenced the slang usage of the term "dingbat" as given above.
- The Dingbats of Danger Street were a DC Comics kids' team created by Jack Kirby.
- There is a board game called Dingbats, in which players must solve rebuses. Following its release, rebuses in this style enjoyed a revival of interest in the UK and the word dingbat was used to describe them. Their popularity peaked in the 1980s, but they still appear in national newspaper's puzzle sections.
- Dingbat (building) also refers to a building on stilts with room for parking underneath, a style of architecture common to post-war development in Los Angeles.
- In South Africa (at least), a Dingbat was a popular toy in the 1970s. It was made up of a hard plastic bat connected to a ball with an elastic string.
(John User:Jwy talk) 03:37, 17 May 2007 (UTC)