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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 06:22pm on 17/03/2012 under
I would never have guessed that "newlyweds" was vanishingly rare before the mid-19-teens. The OED claims rarity merely before the mid-nineteenth century, with instances from 1593 and 1846, but Google's ngram viewer tells a slightly different story of its explosion of use during WWI.

My favorite OED example, for a number of reasons, is this one:
1918 Cosmopolitan Feb. 90/2 A Newlywed can live on Marmalade for about three months.
There are 10 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com at 06:45pm on 17/03/2012
Interesting! I see that honeymoon, as one might expect, is older, but had a precipitous (if temporary) decline in the 1950s. I wonder why?
Edited Date: 2012-03-17 06:45 pm (UTC)
 
posted by [identity profile] aliettedb.livejournal.com at 06:47pm on 17/03/2012
lol.
Clearly, marmalade is full of vitamin and good for your health :)
 
posted by [identity profile] sollersuk.livejournal.com at 08:00pm on 17/03/2012
I suspect that the status of betrothal had a lot to do with its absence in earlier centuries; the wedding was a small step further on rather than a big, single one.
 
posted by [identity profile] del-c.livejournal.com at 01:01am on 18/03/2012
It's interesting how "newly wedded" reaches a peak around 1900, then loses ground to the cutesy shortened versions "newly wed", then "newlywed". All the while the llne for "recently married" sails above.

Google ngram
 
posted by [identity profile] klwilliams.livejournal.com at 03:47am on 18/03/2012
Good thing Chaz is making lots of marmalade tomorrow.
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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 04:07pm on 19/03/2012
I'm relieved you'll likely survive the first three months of marriage.
 
posted by [identity profile] keira-online.livejournal.com at 06:15pm on 18/03/2012
Is anyone else wondering why anyone would want to live on Marmalade for three months?
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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 04:08pm on 19/03/2012
I suspect it's not want, so much as "need", if needs must.
 
posted by [identity profile] zcat-abroad.livejournal.com at 07:43pm on 18/03/2012
Wow! That's an awesome app. I just ran 'yeaning' through it, and discovered that it reached a peak in about 1810 before dribbling off to practically nothing. So I feel entirely justified in having told the Japanese students that no-one uses that word. (I was a bit worried when I came across it in a Mary Stewart novel yesterday...)
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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 04:09pm on 19/03/2012
It's fantastic! Although occasionally requires taking sources with consciousness of context. The corpus is scanned primarily from library books, which meant that, for example, the frequency of the phrase "due date" maps best onto the frequency with which libraries are populated by books from given years, pre-RFID chips.

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