Fluke (pronounced flook)
(1) In nautical jargon, the part of an anchor that
catches in the ground, especially the flat triangular piece at the end of each
arm (also called flue).
(2) A barb, or the barbed head, of a harpoon, spear,
arrow etc (also called flue).
(3) A
metal hook on the head of certain staff weapons (such as a bill), made in
various forms depending on function, whether used for grappling or to penetrate
armour when swung at an opponent.
(4) In
metal casting, a wing-like formation on a central piece (similar to a spur and often
a product of the vesting process to be filed off.
(5) In
industrial processing, waste cotton.
(6) Either half (the triangular lobes) of the tail of cetacean
(whales, dolphins, porpoises and such).
(7) An accidental advantage; a stroke of good luck; a fortuitous
event.
(8) An accident or chance happening.
(9) In cue sports (billiards and such), a successful shot,
achieved wholly by accident.
(10) In ichthyology, any of several American flounders of
the genus Paralichthys, found in the Atlantic Ocean; used loosely, any of
various other flatfishes (an often used an an alternative name for the flounder).
(11) Any parasitic flatworm (notably the blood fluke and liver fluke), of the classes Monogenea and Digenea (formerly united in a single class Trematoda (as trematodes)).
Pre 900: From the Middle English flok, fluke & flewke,
from the Old English flōcand cognate
with the Old Norse flōki; It may be compared
with the and the Old High German flah (flat (source of the modern German flach)), from the Proto-Germanic
flakaz although for technical reasons
related to the phonetics, etymologists seem to prefer a link with the Middle
Low German vlögel (wing) and Germanic
vlōch & vlucht (used in the sense of both “wing” & “flight”) or even vlunke (the modern Low German Flunk (wing,
pinion)). The modern use in German of fluke
to describe the tail of whales and such is thought to be borrowed from English. The use of fish came from the Old English flōc (flatfish), of Germanic origin,
related to the German flach (flat),
the Old Saxon flaka (sole), the Old
High German flah (smooth) and the Old
Norse floke (flatfish, flounder, flak,
floe; disk), all ultimately from Proto-Germanic flakaz, from the primitive Indo European root plak- (to be flat). The parasitic
worm was so named in the 1660s by virtue of the distinctive (flat) shape. Fluke is a noun & verb, flukishness is a
noun, fluking is a verb, fluked is a verb & adjective, flukeless,
fulkesque, flukelike, flukier, flukish, fluky, flukier & flukiest are
adjectives and flukily is an adverb; the noun plural is flukes (the plural
fluke used of the fish; flukes used otherwise including of the flatworms).
The use
to describe the components of anchors, harpoons and such dates from the
mid-sixteenth century and is of obscure origin, most etymologists concluding it
was adopted cognizant of the original sense of “flat”, the reference used
originally of the flat, pointed end of a anchor and that may have been picked up either
from fluke in the sense of “the flatfish” (based on the shape) or from the Low
German flügel (wing). What is certain is the anchor’s triangular fitting
was transferred to the tails of whales (and later other cetaceans), that in use by at least 1725. Fluke has been used in the sense of “a lucky
stroke, a chance hit” only since 1857 (when it appeared in the press also as “flook” and the origin is obscure
although most sources suggest it came from billiards. The speculative theories include (1) a
reference to a whale's use of flukes rapidly to propel themselves in the ocean,
(2) a re-purposing of the contemporary sailors slang “going-a-flunking” (to sail
quickly; to go fast) or (3) an English dialectal origin (in the sense of “a
guess”). The adjective fluky (depending
on chance rather than skill (“pure ass” a modern form)) was in use by at least 1867. The “fluke” usually is something “lucky or fortuitous”
but there are also the idiomatic phrases “fluke out”, “flukes out”, “fluking
out” & “fluked out” which is “to lose or fail due to a fluke; to deserve to
win or succeed but instead lose due to a fluke, especially a last-minute or
unpredictable fluke” and thus connected with the notion of “defeat from the
jaws of victory”. The “fluke up” (also as
“flukes up”, “fluking up” & “fluked up”) is not dependent on the existence
of a “fluke” (in any sense) but means “to mess up; to blunder; to fail” and is
a polite for of “fuck up”.
Fluke Corporation is a highly-regarded US manufacturer of industrial test, measurement and diagnostic equipment best known for their electronic test gear. The company was founded in 1948 by John Fluke (1911-1984), then working at General Electric (GE).
In medical use, the variations include bile fluke
(Clonorchis sinensis), blood fluke (Schistosomatidae spp.), bladder fluke
(Schistosoma haematobium), cat liver fluke (Opisthorchis felineus), cecal fluke
(Postharmostomum gallinum), Chinese liver fluke (Clonorchis sinensis), deer
fluke (Fascioloides magna), lancet fluke (and lancet liver fluke) (Dicrocoelium
dendriticum), sheep liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica), lung fluke (Paragonimus spp.), giant
intestinal fluke (Fasciolopsis buski) and giant liver fluke (Fascioloides
magna); the last two sounding most ominous.
In ichthyology, the names
include bannock fluke (Rhombus maximus), Gulf fluke (Paralichthys albiguttus),
long fluke (Hippoglossoides limandoides), pole fluke (Glyptocephalus
cynoglossus), sail fluke (Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis), American fluke
(Fascioloides magna) and sand fluke (Hippoglossoides limandoides).
Poster for Just My Luck (2006, left) and four of the shots (right) from the roll taken by Larry Schwartzwald on Madison Avenue in 2005.
Being
one of the industry’s notorious nictators, it was perhaps something not
especially flukish when a paparazzo took a photograph of Lindsay Lohan winking but
what was a fluke was the shot was perfect for a movie poster, the thought being
the wink was a midliminal device which convey the message “you will have a marvellously
good time if you watch this film” and the starlet must have agreed because for
a while, the wink became her signature gesture.
According to the authoritative PosterWire, Ms Lohan sat for a photo
shoot so promotional shots would be read for the release (even wearing an
auburn wig because she had by then entered her famous blonde phase) but the
studio rejected what was offered because they were “too high style which was not the vibe of the
film.” Another photo session
was scheduled but then someone remembered the paparazzi “winking shot”; not
only did it become the poster but it also inspired the film’s tag line: “Everything
changed in the wink of an eye.”
The shot used for Just My Luck
(2006) was taken the previous year on Madison Avenue by New York Post
photographer Larry Schwartzwald (1953-2021) who had the untypical background
(among the paparazzi) of studying literature at New York University and, as he
proved, “everything is text”.
Donald Trump (b 1946; US president 2017-2021; president elect 2024), Butler, Pennsylvania, 13 July 2024, the “blood shot” (left) and the “bullet shot” (right), both by Doug Mills (b 1960), who has shot (in the photographic sense) every president since Ronald Reagan (1911-2004; US president 1981-1989).
The “blood shot” is destined to become one of the images of twenty-first US politics and while in many ways “perfect”, it’s really not a “fluke” because at that point, every photographer on site was snapping away and something similar was guaranteed to emerged. Noting the injury was to Mr Trump’s right ear, some immediately dubbed the “bullet shot” the “In one ear and out the other” but it was a genuine fluke because if snapped a millisecond earlier or later, the “speeding bullet” would not have been in the frame; a “one in a million” (at least) shot and therefore flukish.
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