Tuesday, August 30, 2022

 

Warning... This is a Rant!

 Words eh!  some of them really get my head shaking and one is 'Doona!'   Having discovered  Duvets in the UK back in the late 1960's and just loving them,  I find it strange that here in Australia some people call them a Doona, it took me a while to realize that this is a brand name!

I have to admit I've asked the odd person who mentioned their Doona for a photo of the label!   I know boring... 

It's not just us here in Aussie land that have taken on a brand name like this, I remember back in the UK  hearing people saying they had done their 'Hoovering'...  but was it with a Hoover??  Not usually.

I wonder if there are any other brand names used instead of what the actual item is?

The history of Duvets really surprised me, Wow!  so so so long ago.

History[edit]

Records show the earliest duvets were made in China, around 3000 B.C. From Viking times, duvets of eider down were used by people on the northern coast of Norway.  In the 15th century, featherbeds (mattresses) were used by rich monachs in continental Europe and in England, though not by their courtiers.[11] From the 16th century, wealthy people all over continental Europe began buying and using feather duvets.


duvet
/ˈd(j)uːveɪ/
noun
BRITISH
  1. a soft quilt filled with down, feathers, or a synthetic fibre, used instead of an upper sheet and blankets.


doona
/ˈduːnə/
noun
TRADEMARKAUSTRALIAN
  1. a quilted eiderdown or duvet.

Wow!  Just found this little piece about Doona's... interesting.

The word 'doona' is said to have stemmed from the Danish word 'dyne' which means down feathers. So we took on this term in the 1980s like an Australian slang term for quilts, and it has stuck around ever since! Most Australians now use the term doona meaning a quilt: there is no difference between a quilt and a doona.





Of course Penniedarling had to take photos of our Duvet Labels... 




How lovely is this... Snugl down 😍

Gosh this was done a long long time ago, this Duvet is made from our first sleeping bags that we lived in for almost 3 years while exploring Europe in our old London Taxi, they started falling apart and I managed to find a place that turned them into this Duvet.

The label on this one below is all washed out...


But Wait...  I have more...

Why do we follow the Americans and call the Aubergine an Eggplant???

The aubergine is an economically important plant in Asia and Africa, but little is known about how it evolved. Historical documents and genetic data show that the plant was first domesticated in Asia, but most of its wild relatives are from Africa.

Aubergine is a French word, and it is how Europeans refer to what Americans would typically call an eggplant. 

And another...  What is a Larder and What is a Pantry.

A larder is a cool area for storing food prior to use. Originally, it was where raw meat was larded—covered in fat—to be preserved.[2] By the 18th century, the term had expanded. Now a dry larder was where bread, pastry, milk, butter, or cooked meats were stored.[2] Larders were commonplace in houses before the widespread use of the refrigerator.

Stone larders were designed to keep cold in the hottest weather. They had slate or marble shelves two or three inches thick. These shelves were wedged into thick stone walls. Fish or vegetables were laid directly onto the shelves and covered with muslin or handfuls of wet rushes were sprinkled under and around.[3]


Welllllll... At Wollogorang the Pantry was where all the Pots and Pans were kept and the Larder was a cool room where dry and tinned foods were kept, the kitchen also had a wall of Fridges so that's what I grew up with and saw many times in the UK as well.



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Do you “Google”?
 
:-) I think I do Fran! gotta get me facts correct...
 
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