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Anyone know what a Bogot peraon is?
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Someone just told me they went to a wedding recently and bogots came doing a dance and playing music whrn asked what a bogot was they said people who live over the hill in the fields
So i have never heard of this does anyone know anything about them? Or about their culture?
Very intrested in finding out about these people. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Are you sure they said bagot? And not gavotte? Which is a peasant dance and comes from an area in France, associated with the gavotte people,
In the words of Carly Simon, you had one eye in the mirror as you watched yourself gavotte |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"It is either a bigot...
Or a clagnut....
i thought clagnut was when you didnt wash your balls for a week
Dangleberrys??"
nooo, dangleberries are what you have when you dont wipe properly after a poo.
im just getting confused now |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Boggart is one of numerous related terms used in English folklore for either a household spirit or a malevolent genius loci inhabiting fields, marshes or other topographical features. Other names of this group include bug, bugbear, bogey, bogeyman, bogle, etc., presumably all derived from (or related to) Old English puca and Welsh bwg with the same meaning (itself a probable loan from the English bug).[1]
The household form causes mischief and things to disappear, milk to sour, and dogs to go lame. The boggarts inhabiting marshes or holes in the ground are often attributed more serious evil doing, such as the abduction of children. |
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