Is it common for children to say “times” when pausing play?












7















When I was a child on the American west coast, my circle of friends would always say "times!" to suspend play and talk out of character, or otherwise suspend the rules of a game. For example, if we were playing tag, one of us could say "times!" if we got hurt, and the game would stop for a moment.



I assumed that this was a ubiquitous thing, but I was surprised to see just not that neither Merriam-Webster nor Wiktionary documents this usage of the word.



Is this an oversight, or is this a really isolated usage?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 7





    It might have to do with "Time-out" as a word for taking a short break in sports, and could be a slang/colloquialism. However, I used it as a child, and so did my circle of friends, too. Curious what the background on this is.

    – psosuna
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    I have never heard of this before.

    – Jason Bassford
    8 hours ago






  • 6





    In Texas in the 1960s (and presumably afterward) it was common for kids to shout "Time!" as a short form of "Time out!" in a game such as tag or baseball so that the applicability of some special rule or some claimed exemption from the normal rules could be hashed out. I believe that "Time!" for "Time out!" is widespread in sports at all levels throughout North America. However, I have not heard "Times!" (plural) used in this sense anywhere I've lived, which includes (for the past 35 years) the San Francisco Bay Area.

    – Sven Yargs
    8 hours ago











  • When I was a child in a suburb of London and we played in the road, anyone seeing a vehicle coming would shout “ROTTEN EGGS!, and we would all rush for the pavement (‘sidewalk’). I have no idea where it came from or who thought it up. Probably it was an example of private language.

    – Tuffy
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Tuffy Northeast American here, and we used expressions like "last one out is a rotten egg." Suggests to me that your usage wasn't particularly localized.

    – user888379
    8 hours ago
















7















When I was a child on the American west coast, my circle of friends would always say "times!" to suspend play and talk out of character, or otherwise suspend the rules of a game. For example, if we were playing tag, one of us could say "times!" if we got hurt, and the game would stop for a moment.



I assumed that this was a ubiquitous thing, but I was surprised to see just not that neither Merriam-Webster nor Wiktionary documents this usage of the word.



Is this an oversight, or is this a really isolated usage?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 7





    It might have to do with "Time-out" as a word for taking a short break in sports, and could be a slang/colloquialism. However, I used it as a child, and so did my circle of friends, too. Curious what the background on this is.

    – psosuna
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    I have never heard of this before.

    – Jason Bassford
    8 hours ago






  • 6





    In Texas in the 1960s (and presumably afterward) it was common for kids to shout "Time!" as a short form of "Time out!" in a game such as tag or baseball so that the applicability of some special rule or some claimed exemption from the normal rules could be hashed out. I believe that "Time!" for "Time out!" is widespread in sports at all levels throughout North America. However, I have not heard "Times!" (plural) used in this sense anywhere I've lived, which includes (for the past 35 years) the San Francisco Bay Area.

    – Sven Yargs
    8 hours ago











  • When I was a child in a suburb of London and we played in the road, anyone seeing a vehicle coming would shout “ROTTEN EGGS!, and we would all rush for the pavement (‘sidewalk’). I have no idea where it came from or who thought it up. Probably it was an example of private language.

    – Tuffy
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Tuffy Northeast American here, and we used expressions like "last one out is a rotten egg." Suggests to me that your usage wasn't particularly localized.

    – user888379
    8 hours ago














7












7








7


1






When I was a child on the American west coast, my circle of friends would always say "times!" to suspend play and talk out of character, or otherwise suspend the rules of a game. For example, if we were playing tag, one of us could say "times!" if we got hurt, and the game would stop for a moment.



I assumed that this was a ubiquitous thing, but I was surprised to see just not that neither Merriam-Webster nor Wiktionary documents this usage of the word.



Is this an oversight, or is this a really isolated usage?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












When I was a child on the American west coast, my circle of friends would always say "times!" to suspend play and talk out of character, or otherwise suspend the rules of a game. For example, if we were playing tag, one of us could say "times!" if we got hurt, and the game would stop for a moment.



I assumed that this was a ubiquitous thing, but I was surprised to see just not that neither Merriam-Webster nor Wiktionary documents this usage of the word.



Is this an oversight, or is this a really isolated usage?







american-english slang






share|improve this question









New contributor




Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









Mitch

51.4k15103214




51.4k15103214






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Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 9 hours ago









NickNick

361




361




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Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 7





    It might have to do with "Time-out" as a word for taking a short break in sports, and could be a slang/colloquialism. However, I used it as a child, and so did my circle of friends, too. Curious what the background on this is.

    – psosuna
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    I have never heard of this before.

    – Jason Bassford
    8 hours ago






  • 6





    In Texas in the 1960s (and presumably afterward) it was common for kids to shout "Time!" as a short form of "Time out!" in a game such as tag or baseball so that the applicability of some special rule or some claimed exemption from the normal rules could be hashed out. I believe that "Time!" for "Time out!" is widespread in sports at all levels throughout North America. However, I have not heard "Times!" (plural) used in this sense anywhere I've lived, which includes (for the past 35 years) the San Francisco Bay Area.

    – Sven Yargs
    8 hours ago











  • When I was a child in a suburb of London and we played in the road, anyone seeing a vehicle coming would shout “ROTTEN EGGS!, and we would all rush for the pavement (‘sidewalk’). I have no idea where it came from or who thought it up. Probably it was an example of private language.

    – Tuffy
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Tuffy Northeast American here, and we used expressions like "last one out is a rotten egg." Suggests to me that your usage wasn't particularly localized.

    – user888379
    8 hours ago














  • 7





    It might have to do with "Time-out" as a word for taking a short break in sports, and could be a slang/colloquialism. However, I used it as a child, and so did my circle of friends, too. Curious what the background on this is.

    – psosuna
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    I have never heard of this before.

    – Jason Bassford
    8 hours ago






  • 6





    In Texas in the 1960s (and presumably afterward) it was common for kids to shout "Time!" as a short form of "Time out!" in a game such as tag or baseball so that the applicability of some special rule or some claimed exemption from the normal rules could be hashed out. I believe that "Time!" for "Time out!" is widespread in sports at all levels throughout North America. However, I have not heard "Times!" (plural) used in this sense anywhere I've lived, which includes (for the past 35 years) the San Francisco Bay Area.

    – Sven Yargs
    8 hours ago











  • When I was a child in a suburb of London and we played in the road, anyone seeing a vehicle coming would shout “ROTTEN EGGS!, and we would all rush for the pavement (‘sidewalk’). I have no idea where it came from or who thought it up. Probably it was an example of private language.

    – Tuffy
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Tuffy Northeast American here, and we used expressions like "last one out is a rotten egg." Suggests to me that your usage wasn't particularly localized.

    – user888379
    8 hours ago








7




7





It might have to do with "Time-out" as a word for taking a short break in sports, and could be a slang/colloquialism. However, I used it as a child, and so did my circle of friends, too. Curious what the background on this is.

– psosuna
8 hours ago





It might have to do with "Time-out" as a word for taking a short break in sports, and could be a slang/colloquialism. However, I used it as a child, and so did my circle of friends, too. Curious what the background on this is.

– psosuna
8 hours ago




1




1





I have never heard of this before.

– Jason Bassford
8 hours ago





I have never heard of this before.

– Jason Bassford
8 hours ago




6




6





In Texas in the 1960s (and presumably afterward) it was common for kids to shout "Time!" as a short form of "Time out!" in a game such as tag or baseball so that the applicability of some special rule or some claimed exemption from the normal rules could be hashed out. I believe that "Time!" for "Time out!" is widespread in sports at all levels throughout North America. However, I have not heard "Times!" (plural) used in this sense anywhere I've lived, which includes (for the past 35 years) the San Francisco Bay Area.

– Sven Yargs
8 hours ago





In Texas in the 1960s (and presumably afterward) it was common for kids to shout "Time!" as a short form of "Time out!" in a game such as tag or baseball so that the applicability of some special rule or some claimed exemption from the normal rules could be hashed out. I believe that "Time!" for "Time out!" is widespread in sports at all levels throughout North America. However, I have not heard "Times!" (plural) used in this sense anywhere I've lived, which includes (for the past 35 years) the San Francisco Bay Area.

– Sven Yargs
8 hours ago













When I was a child in a suburb of London and we played in the road, anyone seeing a vehicle coming would shout “ROTTEN EGGS!, and we would all rush for the pavement (‘sidewalk’). I have no idea where it came from or who thought it up. Probably it was an example of private language.

– Tuffy
8 hours ago





When I was a child in a suburb of London and we played in the road, anyone seeing a vehicle coming would shout “ROTTEN EGGS!, and we would all rush for the pavement (‘sidewalk’). I have no idea where it came from or who thought it up. Probably it was an example of private language.

– Tuffy
8 hours ago




1




1





@Tuffy Northeast American here, and we used expressions like "last one out is a rotten egg." Suggests to me that your usage wasn't particularly localized.

– user888379
8 hours ago





@Tuffy Northeast American here, and we used expressions like "last one out is a rotten egg." Suggests to me that your usage wasn't particularly localized.

– user888379
8 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














As reported in J. Benjamins' 1996 Focus on the USA (results from a 1994 survey), of 296 informants ("younger people") responding to "In a game of tag, if a player wants to rest, what does he call out so that he can’t be tagged?" (DARE Question EE17),




Times was reported 20 times...times has spread as far west as Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Minnesota, as well as one response in Arizona.



[As quoted in Dictionary of American Regional English Online; paywalled.]




The simple exclamation 'times!' is one of several variants. DARE supposes the sense is probably "transf[erred] from time out a brief suspension of play in var[ious] organized sports (OED2 time out...)" (op. cit.).



Of the variants time(s), times out, and times ex (rare), DARE observes that ex in the equivalent phrase king's ex




is often assumed to be an abbr[eviation] for excuse, [but] it seems more likely that it, as well as (s)cruce(s) and crosses, refers to the act of crossing the fingers, often an essentail part of claiming a truce or time out.



[From the entry for "king's ex exclam, n", DARE (paywalled).]




In addition to DARE and Benjamins' more 'scientific' data collection, commenters at this site (ELU) attest the use of the exclamation 'times!', sometimes accompanied by a 'T' hand gesture, in the children's game sense of "time out" in California (undated, and 1980s) and Nova Scotia (1990s), etc.






share|improve this answer


























  • We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago













  • As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

    – Anoplexian
    4 hours ago











  • As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

    – Sandy Chapman
    3 hours ago











  • My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

    – choster
    3 hours ago



















4














I used this phrase exactly this way in Texas as a child.



You'll have better luck looking in the Dictionary of American Regional English for phrases like this rather than a standard dictionary like MW.






share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    9














    As reported in J. Benjamins' 1996 Focus on the USA (results from a 1994 survey), of 296 informants ("younger people") responding to "In a game of tag, if a player wants to rest, what does he call out so that he can’t be tagged?" (DARE Question EE17),




    Times was reported 20 times...times has spread as far west as Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Minnesota, as well as one response in Arizona.



    [As quoted in Dictionary of American Regional English Online; paywalled.]




    The simple exclamation 'times!' is one of several variants. DARE supposes the sense is probably "transf[erred] from time out a brief suspension of play in var[ious] organized sports (OED2 time out...)" (op. cit.).



    Of the variants time(s), times out, and times ex (rare), DARE observes that ex in the equivalent phrase king's ex




    is often assumed to be an abbr[eviation] for excuse, [but] it seems more likely that it, as well as (s)cruce(s) and crosses, refers to the act of crossing the fingers, often an essentail part of claiming a truce or time out.



    [From the entry for "king's ex exclam, n", DARE (paywalled).]




    In addition to DARE and Benjamins' more 'scientific' data collection, commenters at this site (ELU) attest the use of the exclamation 'times!', sometimes accompanied by a 'T' hand gesture, in the children's game sense of "time out" in California (undated, and 1980s) and Nova Scotia (1990s), etc.






    share|improve this answer


























    • We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

      – TRomano
      6 hours ago













    • As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

      – Anoplexian
      4 hours ago











    • As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

      – Sandy Chapman
      3 hours ago











    • My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

      – choster
      3 hours ago
















    9














    As reported in J. Benjamins' 1996 Focus on the USA (results from a 1994 survey), of 296 informants ("younger people") responding to "In a game of tag, if a player wants to rest, what does he call out so that he can’t be tagged?" (DARE Question EE17),




    Times was reported 20 times...times has spread as far west as Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Minnesota, as well as one response in Arizona.



    [As quoted in Dictionary of American Regional English Online; paywalled.]




    The simple exclamation 'times!' is one of several variants. DARE supposes the sense is probably "transf[erred] from time out a brief suspension of play in var[ious] organized sports (OED2 time out...)" (op. cit.).



    Of the variants time(s), times out, and times ex (rare), DARE observes that ex in the equivalent phrase king's ex




    is often assumed to be an abbr[eviation] for excuse, [but] it seems more likely that it, as well as (s)cruce(s) and crosses, refers to the act of crossing the fingers, often an essentail part of claiming a truce or time out.



    [From the entry for "king's ex exclam, n", DARE (paywalled).]




    In addition to DARE and Benjamins' more 'scientific' data collection, commenters at this site (ELU) attest the use of the exclamation 'times!', sometimes accompanied by a 'T' hand gesture, in the children's game sense of "time out" in California (undated, and 1980s) and Nova Scotia (1990s), etc.






    share|improve this answer


























    • We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

      – TRomano
      6 hours ago













    • As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

      – Anoplexian
      4 hours ago











    • As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

      – Sandy Chapman
      3 hours ago











    • My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

      – choster
      3 hours ago














    9












    9








    9







    As reported in J. Benjamins' 1996 Focus on the USA (results from a 1994 survey), of 296 informants ("younger people") responding to "In a game of tag, if a player wants to rest, what does he call out so that he can’t be tagged?" (DARE Question EE17),




    Times was reported 20 times...times has spread as far west as Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Minnesota, as well as one response in Arizona.



    [As quoted in Dictionary of American Regional English Online; paywalled.]




    The simple exclamation 'times!' is one of several variants. DARE supposes the sense is probably "transf[erred] from time out a brief suspension of play in var[ious] organized sports (OED2 time out...)" (op. cit.).



    Of the variants time(s), times out, and times ex (rare), DARE observes that ex in the equivalent phrase king's ex




    is often assumed to be an abbr[eviation] for excuse, [but] it seems more likely that it, as well as (s)cruce(s) and crosses, refers to the act of crossing the fingers, often an essentail part of claiming a truce or time out.



    [From the entry for "king's ex exclam, n", DARE (paywalled).]




    In addition to DARE and Benjamins' more 'scientific' data collection, commenters at this site (ELU) attest the use of the exclamation 'times!', sometimes accompanied by a 'T' hand gesture, in the children's game sense of "time out" in California (undated, and 1980s) and Nova Scotia (1990s), etc.






    share|improve this answer















    As reported in J. Benjamins' 1996 Focus on the USA (results from a 1994 survey), of 296 informants ("younger people") responding to "In a game of tag, if a player wants to rest, what does he call out so that he can’t be tagged?" (DARE Question EE17),




    Times was reported 20 times...times has spread as far west as Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Minnesota, as well as one response in Arizona.



    [As quoted in Dictionary of American Regional English Online; paywalled.]




    The simple exclamation 'times!' is one of several variants. DARE supposes the sense is probably "transf[erred] from time out a brief suspension of play in var[ious] organized sports (OED2 time out...)" (op. cit.).



    Of the variants time(s), times out, and times ex (rare), DARE observes that ex in the equivalent phrase king's ex




    is often assumed to be an abbr[eviation] for excuse, [but] it seems more likely that it, as well as (s)cruce(s) and crosses, refers to the act of crossing the fingers, often an essentail part of claiming a truce or time out.



    [From the entry for "king's ex exclam, n", DARE (paywalled).]




    In addition to DARE and Benjamins' more 'scientific' data collection, commenters at this site (ELU) attest the use of the exclamation 'times!', sometimes accompanied by a 'T' hand gesture, in the children's game sense of "time out" in California (undated, and 1980s) and Nova Scotia (1990s), etc.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 2 hours ago

























    answered 6 hours ago









    JELJEL

    27k45190




    27k45190













    • We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

      – TRomano
      6 hours ago













    • As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

      – Anoplexian
      4 hours ago











    • As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

      – Sandy Chapman
      3 hours ago











    • My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

      – choster
      3 hours ago



















    • We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

      – TRomano
      6 hours ago













    • As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

      – Anoplexian
      4 hours ago











    • As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

      – Sandy Chapman
      3 hours ago











    • My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

      – choster
      3 hours ago

















    We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago







    We yelled Time! or Time out! or I call time! in southeastern Pennsylvania, near the Twelve Mile Circle.

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago















    As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

    – Anoplexian
    4 hours ago





    As far west as Texas? As a Californian, I can say with absolute certainty it made its way all the way.

    – Anoplexian
    4 hours ago













    As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

    – Sandy Chapman
    3 hours ago





    As a kid in the 90s, I said this in Nova Scotia, Canada. So I'd say it's likely fairly widespread.

    – Sandy Chapman
    3 hours ago













    My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

    – choster
    3 hours ago





    My elementary school friends and I in 1980s Southern California definitely called times to ask for a pause in play, accompanied with a T gesture with our hands to signify a time out, but without prejudice against time out!

    – choster
    3 hours ago













    4














    I used this phrase exactly this way in Texas as a child.



    You'll have better luck looking in the Dictionary of American Regional English for phrases like this rather than a standard dictionary like MW.






    share|improve this answer




























      4














      I used this phrase exactly this way in Texas as a child.



      You'll have better luck looking in the Dictionary of American Regional English for phrases like this rather than a standard dictionary like MW.






      share|improve this answer


























        4












        4








        4







        I used this phrase exactly this way in Texas as a child.



        You'll have better luck looking in the Dictionary of American Regional English for phrases like this rather than a standard dictionary like MW.






        share|improve this answer













        I used this phrase exactly this way in Texas as a child.



        You'll have better luck looking in the Dictionary of American Regional English for phrases like this rather than a standard dictionary like MW.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 7 hours ago









        MarkTOMarkTO

        1,10847




        1,10847






















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