Help
RSS
API
Feed
Maltego
Contact
Domain > etymologems.victorjacobson.com
×
More information on this domain is in
AlienVault OTX
Is this malicious?
Yes
No
DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2019-03-07
66.147.240.172
(
ClassC
)
2024-12-26
67.20.76.244
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Sun, 10 Mar 2024 03:20:11 GMTServer: ApacheUpgrade: h2,h2cConnection: UpgradeLast-Modified: Fri, 16 Nov 2018 08:01:21 GMTAccept-Ranges: bytesContent-Length: 10135Vary: Accept-Enco !doctype html>HTML>head>meta charsetUTF-8>meta nameviewport contentwidthdevice-width, initial-scale1>title>Etymologems/title>link hrefstyles/boilerplate.css relstylesheet typetext/css>link hrefstyles/fluid-grid.css relstylesheet typetext/css>link hrefstyles/style.css relstylesheet typetext/css />/head>img srcimg/bg.jpg alt1 namefsbg idfsbg />div classgridContainer clearfix> div idheader classfluid aligncenter>a href index.html>img srcimg/EtymologemsLogo.png width800 heightauto altVictorJacobson idlogo/>/a>/div> div idfooter classfluid > br> table aligncenter width100% border0 cellspacing0 cellpadding5> tr> td aligncenter valigntop classheader> Word Origins designed to amuse, enlighten, and improve your lex-appeal /td> /tr> /table> br> /div> div idmainContent classfluid > table aligncenter border0 cellspacing0 cellpadding0> tr> td aligncenter valigntop classheader> img srcimg/gems/bigwig.jpg> /td> /tr> tr> td aligncenter valigntop classheader> Bigwig/flip ones wig/hoodwink/pull the wool over one’s eyes/flipped their wigs /td> /tr> tr> td classbody>During the reign of Queen Anne of England (1702-1714) and the reign of Louis XIV of France (1643-1715), according to etymologist C.E. Funk, Jr., it was fashionable to don wigs at court. This fashion evolved so that the size and type of wig worn provided an indication of the importance of the wearer, i.e., the more important the person, the more impressive the wig. Wigs eventually lost favor, but were worn by judges in the British courts until autumn 2008 when they were no longer required. The bigwig idiom persists today connoting “an important and influential person, especially a party leader.” The popular expression, biggie is the contemporary version of bigwig. Today one can be a bigwig regardless of the quantity of his tresses, or, indeed, even lack thereof. Whil
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Sun, 10 Mar 2024 03:20:12 GMTServer: ApacheUpgrade: h2,h2cConnection: UpgradeLast-Modified: Fri, 16 Nov 2018 08:01:21 GMTAccept-Ranges: bytesContent-Length: 10135Vary: Accept-Enco !doctype html>HTML>head>meta charsetUTF-8>meta nameviewport contentwidthdevice-width, initial-scale1>title>Etymologems/title>link hrefstyles/boilerplate.css relstylesheet typetext/css>link hrefstyles/fluid-grid.css relstylesheet typetext/css>link hrefstyles/style.css relstylesheet typetext/css />/head>img srcimg/bg.jpg alt1 namefsbg idfsbg />div classgridContainer clearfix> div idheader classfluid aligncenter>a href index.html>img srcimg/EtymologemsLogo.png width800 heightauto altVictorJacobson idlogo/>/a>/div> div idfooter classfluid > br> table aligncenter width100% border0 cellspacing0 cellpadding5> tr> td aligncenter valigntop classheader> Word Origins designed to amuse, enlighten, and improve your lex-appeal /td> /tr> /table> br> /div> div idmainContent classfluid > table aligncenter border0 cellspacing0 cellpadding0> tr> td aligncenter valigntop classheader> img srcimg/gems/bigwig.jpg> /td> /tr> tr> td aligncenter valigntop classheader> Bigwig/flip ones wig/hoodwink/pull the wool over one’s eyes/flipped their wigs /td> /tr> tr> td classbody>During the reign of Queen Anne of England (1702-1714) and the reign of Louis XIV of France (1643-1715), according to etymologist C.E. Funk, Jr., it was fashionable to don wigs at court. This fashion evolved so that the size and type of wig worn provided an indication of the importance of the wearer, i.e., the more important the person, the more impressive the wig. Wigs eventually lost favor, but were worn by judges in the British courts until autumn 2008 when they were no longer required. The bigwig idiom persists today connoting “an important and influential person, especially a party leader.” The popular expression, biggie is the contemporary version of bigwig. Today one can be a bigwig regardless of the quantity of his tresses, or, indeed, even lack thereof. Whil
View on OTX
|
View on ThreatMiner
Please enable JavaScript to view the
comments powered by Disqus.
Data with thanks to
AlienVault OTX
,
VirusTotal
,
Malwr
and
others
. [
Sitemap
]