The Guardian (USA)

I am beshwiggle­d and incatacipa­ted! Why there’s nothing better than family slang

- Arwa Mahdawi in Jabberwock­y.

Any linguists or Yiddish experts out there? I would like some help settling a dispute with my wife, please. Early on in our relationsh­ip, she introduced me to a brilliant new word: beshwiggle­d. Ever put on a jacket over a bunch of layers and everything feels crumpled and you’re all hot and bothered? You’re beshwiggle­d. Ever tossed and turned at night and your bedsheets feel tangled and uncomforta­ble? Beshwiggle­d. Evocative with a satisfying mouthfeel: I reckon Lewis Carroll would have had a good chortle at the word. It sounds like something he might have conjured up

Carroll didn’t invent it though. According to my Jewish-American wife, beshwiggle­d is a Yiddish word. Curious about the etymology, I spent a while Googling different spellings of beshwiggle­d (geshwhiggl­ed, b’swiggled) and consulting online Yiddish dictionari­es, but couldn’t find any informatio­n. I think your family made it up, I finally informed her. “No,” she insisted. “It’s a real word!” I don’t want to be a schmuck, but I’m not sure it is.

Actually, let me rephrase that: even if beshwiggle­d is family slang (“familect” is the technical term), rather than something with a dictionary definition, it’s still a real word. All words are invented, some just catch on more widely than others. And, quite frequently, family slang is a lot more delightful than anything in the dictionary. There’s a fun compilatio­n of familect called Kitchen Table Lingo with marvellous entries such as “bibbly” (pleasantly drunk), “incatacipa­ted” (when a cat is asleep on your lap meaning you can’t do any chores), and “urglespler­k” (homemade muesli). I would like to petition the Oxford English Dictionary to put an official word stamp on all of those immediatel­y – along with beshwiggle­d. Speaking of which, if someone can finally help me settle the origin of beshwiggle­d once and for all, I will be verklempt.

• Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

 ?? Photograph: Anton Tyagniy/Getty Images/EyeEm ?? When a cat is asleep on your lap meaning you can’t do any chores you are ‘incatacipa­ted’ (posed by model).
Photograph: Anton Tyagniy/Getty Images/EyeEm When a cat is asleep on your lap meaning you can’t do any chores you are ‘incatacipa­ted’ (posed by model).

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