ChatterBank2 mins ago
'Feignlights' Meaning?
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I am trying to discover the origin and correct spelling of the term 'Feignlights'. My daughter posed this question to me and I know that I used the term at school some 50 years ago, usually to define a 'truce' in some type arguement etc sometime accompanied with a linking of the little fingers, some times 'pax' was used in the same circumstances.
Can any one help? Thanks
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Fains, fains I, fain it and fainites were all schoolboy versions of the demand for a truce. I'd imagine your 'feignlights' - more probably 'fainlights' - was a local version of that. They all come from the old verb 'fen', a corruption of 'fend', meaning to ward off/protect oneself. So, fains I' was really just the opposite of 'bags I'...ie I don't want this.
Feignites was a playground expression, used more by boys than girls. I remember my brothers using it when they were playing a game that suddenly became a bit rough. 'Feignites' excused you from any further attacks, almost like a magic word, an invisible place of safety. Of course it wouldn't protect you from anything more serious than a playground game!
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