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Friday, December 31, 2010

Happy New Year - Turn the Page


It is funny to hear people at 12:00 sing in the new year with their "own" version of Auld Lang Syne.  It is a song that always bring a tear as we hug and sing together usually swaying, raising a glass and seldom signing the same words.

You know that song you hear every New Year's Eve? The one about not forgetting old acquaintances. Did you ever wonder what that phrase is in the chorus? Is it:
  • For old ang zine
  • Far hold ang zyne
  • For old aunt Gzyne
  • Farheld ang zyne
  • Farheld ang sign
  • For old ang sign
  • For old angsign
  • Foothold and sign
  • For all the aunts of mine
Actually, it's not any of these. On New Year's Eve, the most common song for most English-speaking people to sing is "Auld Lang Syne." Isn't it funny how it's possible to sing and hear a song so many times and have no idea what it means? And wouldn't it be funny if it meant "Big Pink Elephants"? 

A good sub-question is, what language is it?

It turns out that "Auld Lang Syne" is an extremely old Scottish song that was first written down in the 1700s. Robert Burns is the person whose transcription got the most attention, so the song is associated with him.
A good translation of the words "auld lang syne" is "times gone by." So (incorporating a couple of other translations) when we sing this song, we are saying, "We'll drink a cup of kindness yet for times gone by." 


Happy New Year
Richard and Joan Parker

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