by Megareader » 26 Sep 2005 2:24
Okay, d0ded0, turns out this is a good question . . .
I am not finding a lot of instances of "loid" used as a noun out there. I did find several of it used as a verb, however, perhaps even here it is not as common as I thought.
You see, one of the examples I found was in the Bernie Rodenbarr series written by Lawrence Block. I'm a big Block fan (not so much Rodenbarr the burglar as Matt Scudder the down-and-out ex-cop alcoholic P.I.) so I probably ran across this term often in reading and assumed it was common parlance. Guess if locksmiths don't use it, it probably is more of a term used by detective novelists. Haha.
It is listed in the Word For The Day sites, but only as a verb . . . to loid open a door, etc.
So I guess leaning on that word might not be such a great idea. I wonder how many others out there have used it.
Help my fictional sleuth get a clue about locks. Please?