![]() This week, we celebrate the tiny Proto-Indo-European word, *ar-. a word that meant to fit together. Its progeny are legion. *ar- gave us words that acknowledge the fitting together necessary for military action: armada armament armor armory army gendarme ordnance & the fitting together it takes to cease military action: armistice disarm *ar- gave us words that acknowledge the fitting together that is art: art artifact artist artisan It gave us the names of critters that fit together: arthropod armadillo And words that recognize other ways things might fit together: armoire aristocracy arthritis articulate artifact coordination harmony ornament ornate subordinate order Even words that suggest fitting together is simply the way of things: ordinary inert inertia And a word that may just be where all this fitting together started: primordial Did any of these fitting together words surprise you? If so, please say so in the comments section. My thanks go out to this week’s sources: the Merriam Webster, OED, Collins Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary, & Etymonline.
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![]() There is magic in lists, & a very particular sort of magic in lists of idioms. To celebrate that magic, here’s a list of idioms beginning with the word pull. pull a fast one pull a muscle pull ahead pull in the reins pull one’s punches pull one’s weight pull oneself together pull oneself up by one’s bootstraps pull over pull a rabbit out of a hat pull rank pull someone down pull someone’s chain pull someone’s leg pull something off pull something out of a hat pull something out of thin air pull something together pull strings pull the long bow pull the plug on something/someone pull the rug out from under something/someone like pulling teeth pull the trigger on something pull the wool over someone’s eyes pull through pull up stakes pull up with a start I hope that brought a smile. Any responses are welcome. My thanks go out to this week’s sources: the MyEnglish Teacher site, OED, TheFreeDictionary, Oxford Dictionary, & Etymonline. ![]() The process of preening ourselves to look smart, tidy or stylish, has any number of labels. Here are a few. Since the late 1800s we can get duded up (or dooded/doodied up if preferred). This term came about in the late 1800s from the word dude (city slicker). The Proto-Indo European word *sleigh- meant to glide smoothly, & gave us the English word slick, which made its way across the pond to America, where one variant came to mean preening oneself to look smart, tidy or stylish -- slicked up. We can also get spruced up. This idiom seems to have been born of the fancy leather jerkins worn by Prussian soldiers back when the word spruce used to refer to Prussians. In the early 1800s a fancily dressed individual could be referred to as a spiff, which gave birth to the late 1800s idiom spiffed up. And since the 1940s we’ve had the term gussied up. Though nobody’s certain of its origins, it may have come from a familiar name for Augustus (Gussie), or from the word gusset. In the early 1800s when one tidied oneself, the verb tidivate came along (from the word tidy + verb ending -vate). It soon shifted to titivate. So, next time you need to look fancy, what term will you use for the process of getting there? My thanks go out to this week’s sources: the OED, Etymonline. Free Dictionary, Merriam Webster, Collins Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary, & Wordnik ![]() Most English words have their source in Latin, Greek, or Germanic languages. But not all. Slogan is one such word. Slogan comes from the Celtic term slough gairm, which roughly translates to service cry. When it moved from Celtic into Gaelic, it became sluogh ghairm, meaning battle cry. From there, it made its way to English, first appearing as slogorne in 1510, & morphing to the spelling we know today by 1670. By 1704 slogan meant distinctive word or phrase used by a political or business group. So all this suggests that the modern citizen has a historical argument for feeling overwhelmed or embattled by the war cries of advertising & poltical slogans. Intriguing, eh? My thanks go out to this week’s sources: the OED, Etymonline. Merriam Webster, Collins Dictionary, & Wordnik (image from Daily Mail) ![]() Like the USA, Uncle Sam has changed over time. The first images of Uncle Sam (aka Brother Jonathan) appeared during and after the War of 1812. He was clean-shaven, wore a black suit, and appeared to be in his thirties. As the nation aged, so did Uncle Sam. Most historians appear to agree that our modern use of the term Uncle Sam is based on New York meatpacker, Samuel Wilson. During the War of 1812, Samuel and his brother Ebenezer got the gig to supply meat to the soldiers on the battlefield. The US Army wasn’t Sam and Ebenezer’s only customer though, so in order to deliver the right meat to the right place, the barrels of salted beef and pork bound for the battlefront were labeled “US” (for United States). Since the New Yorkers who worked for Samuel and Ebenezer called Samuel Uncle Sam, the connection was made. Who feeds our boys in uniform? Uncle Sam. As time progressed and President Lincoln became a prominent figure, cartoonists’ images of Uncle Sam became taller, older, leaner, and whiskered, leading eventually to the iconic Uncle Sam most of us think of today — the Army recruitment image drawn by James Montgomery Flagg in 1917. Interestingly, some historians point to an alarmingly similar image of Lord Kitchener on a British recruitment poster from the previous decade. So this term & image have morphed in meaning, starting out as a New York meatpacker, shifting to provider, then to recruiter, with many politically inspired twists & turns along the way. Some may argue a picture is worth a thousand words. I’d submit that pictures and words may have more in common than we think. Big thanks to this week’s sources: the OED, History.com, University of Virginia, Rick Beyer’s The Greatest Stories Never Told, Etymonline, Merriam Webster, & Collins Dictionary. ![]() This week with acknowledgment that there are heaps of other traditions going on this time of year, here are some etymologies for a few items on the traditional Christmas dinner table. The word turkey showed up in English in the 1540s & originally applied to the guinea fowl of Madagascar (which the English mistakenly believed came from Turkey). The turkeys on many Americans’ tables today are another bird altogether, a species first domesticated by the Aztecs. Spanish conquistadors met their first new world turkeys in 1523, and brought them back to Europe & northern Africa. Within fifty years, those new world turkeys had become the main course of choice for most British Christmas dinners. Apparently, the ancestors of the word ham had their sights on moving up in the world.The original source of the word ham is a Proto-Germanic word for shinbone — this word became an Old English word meaning the hollow or bend of the knee, and from there we have the modern English word ham, meaning the thigh of a hog (usually salted or cured). This upward-moving definition is a good thing, as a hog’s shinbone wouldn’t be much of a holiday feast. And of course, there’s the Christmas goose. Its source is the Proto-Indo-European word *ghans-, meaning goose. This word’s progeny form a multi-cultural (or multi-lingual, I suppose) cornucopia of words meaning goose, in all these languages: Sanskrit, Lithuanian. German, Old Frisian, Old Norse, Latin, Polish, Greek, & Old Irish. In the 1580s, yam made its way into English through Spanish (igname) or Portuguese (inhame) from a West African language, where nyami simply meant to eat. And to close all this off, the word cranberry came to English in the 1640s — an American English adaptation of the German word kraanbere, a similar berry found in Europe, most likely named kraanbere because the stamen of the flower of this bere, (berry), resembles a kraan (crane). May your holiday traditions - whatever they are - be filled with tasty food, stellar people, & general wonderfulness. Big thanks to this week’s sources: the OED, Wordnik, Etymonline, Merriam Webster, & Collins Dictionary. ![]() The explosion of allegations of impropriety among men with power has got me thinking. When I was young (lo these many years ago) the terms defining such men didn’t always seem to have negative connotations. Given the culture at the time, labeling men with terms like Casanova, ladies’ man, Romeo, Don Juan and even playboy didn't necessarily seem negative. Though this could reflect a naïveté on my part, I’m pretty sure it mostly reflected the patriarchal nature of the era. I don’t think there’s any argument that in this regard we have entered a new era. To that end, here are some modern definitions of words you might find upon looking up synonyms for the term Casanova, Don Juan, or ladies’ man. cad - a man or boy whose behavior is not gentlemanly, an ill-mannered fellow, a mean, vulgar seducer Casanova - a man of carnal adventures — a connoisseur of seduction Don Juan - a serial seducer, also a dissolute nobleman & seducer of women - the hero of many poems, plays, & operas gallant - initially (early 1400s) a seducer of women, then a man of fashion & pleasure, & then, a man who is particularly attentive to women, eventually a dashing man who pursues women lady-killer - a man who is very successful at attracting women, but soon leaves them lecher - a man who indulges his sexual desires excessively & without restraint libertine - one who acts without moral restraint & has no care for what others think Lothario - a jaunty rake lounge lizard - an idler & pleasure seeker in search of women to support him masher - a man who annoys women not acquainted with him by attempting familiarities philanderer - a man who engages in serial, insincere love affairs, playboy - a well-to-do man who spends much time & energy in pleasure seeking & dissipation poodle-faker - British army slang for an ingratiating man who flirts, especially for social or professional advancement Romeo - a passionate admirer & seducer of women satyr - a lustful or lecherous man skirt chaser - a man who habitually tries to seduce women smooth operator - a man who appears pleasant, relaxed and confident in an attempt to deceive; a con artist or clever scoundrel wolf - a man who flirts aggressively with many women womanizer - an adulterous man paramour - one engaged in sexual love as distinct from other kinds of love, an illicit or secret lover rake - a man habituated to immoral conduct So, are Casanova & cad synonymous? Please leave a comment. Big thanks to this week’s sources: the OED, Wordnik, Etymonline, Merriam Webster, & Collins Dictionary. ![]() Since 1854 we’ve been able to apply the word vegetable to humans we feel are dull & inactive. However, as both etymologists & vegetarians/vegans might argue, this shade of meaning flies in the face of the original vegetable & its countless cousins. Vegetable came from the Proto-Indo-European root *weg-, which meant to be strong & lively. This same root gave us heaps of other strong & lively words. Vigor showed up in 1300 through Old French from *weg-. Vigil appeared in the 1200s through Anglo-French & Latin, from a word meaning watchfulness. *Weg- gave us the words watch, awake, & wake through Old English about 1200, meaning a state of vigilant wakefulness. In the 1500s, waft showed up through Middle Dutch and German, meaning to move through the air (like the breath that keeps us strong & lively). This watchfulness shade of meaning made its way through French to English in 1802, to give us the word surveillance. Vigilante came to us in 1856 through Spanish. In the early 1400s, *weg- made its way through Latin to become velocity, meaning swiftness or speed. By 1702 we began referring to a band of soldiers who remained watchful, dressed & armed through the night as a bivouac. This word came to English through Swiss-Alsation. In the 1200s the word wait was born — originally to watch with hostile intent. Though etymologists haven’t quite nailed it down, the words witch & wiccan may very well have come through Germanic languages from *weg-. Nothing like a watchful, vigilant, wafting & witchy veggie, eh? Big thanks to this week’s sources: the OED, Wordnik, Etymonline, Merriam Webster, & Collins Dictionary. ![]() One of the alluring elements of any language is the music of it, & one of the ways we infuse a language with music is the repetition or near-repetition of sounds. Linguists call these childish-sounding gems reduplications. Here are a few: A reduplication of the word roll came to be in 1820 — roly-poly. In 1940, a reduplication of the word super was born -- super-duper. Since 1741 those who move slowly have dilly-dallied. Since 1610 those who lie can be said to fib. Though fib isn’t a reduplication, it was born of the reduplication fibble-fable, a term of the 1500s meant to disparage the telling of fables. Zigzag (or zig-zag) came to us in 1712. It’s likely this term grew from the German reduplication zickzack, a play on the word zacke, which meant tooth or prong. Since the 1530s, when someone goes about doing something in a backward fashion, that person’s actions can be labeled arsy-versy, a reduplication of the somewhat titillating word, arse. Some Linguists suggest this term might also have been influenced by the word reverse. And the reduplication ticky-tacky, brainchild of folksinger Malvina Reynolds, made its debut in 1962 to label the reiterating rows of tacky homes being built at the time. Listen to her song, “Little Boxes,” here. First meaning feeble or poor in quality, & later meaning vacillating, the term wishy-washy has been with us since the 1690s. And though the term willy-nilly sounds like a reduplication, it's not. It was born in the 1600s of the phrase will he, nill he, which meant with or without the will of the person in question. Willy-nilly doesn’t qualify as a reduplication because it’s not simply a near-repeated sound. Its roots clearly go back to two words that simply happen to rhyme. Proof that hardworking etymologists are exacting & don’t go about things willy-nilly. If you're interested in more examples of reduplication, check out this post, or this one. Please leave any comments on all this reduplication in the comment section. Big thanks to this week’s sources: the OED, Etymonline, Merriam Webster, Wordnik, & Collins Dictionary. ![]() The news seems able to cover endless stories regarding dishonesty, shooting, manipulation, graft, harassment, & systemic inequality. These stories rightfully spark significant emotion, but we Americans aren’t famous for our facility with emotional vocabulary. This week’s Wordmonger post asks, What are we really feeling about all this? Our default word tends to be angry. Dictionaries tells us anger is a broad term which implies emotional agitation of no specified intensity, aroused by great displeasure. That doesn’t quite nail my emotional response to all this, so here are some options: Fury is an overwhelming rage of a frenzied nature, bordering on madness. When we feel upset we’re experiencing an emotional toppling or disorganization. Ire suggests that our anger & wrath are transforming into keen resentment. When we are vexed, we are troubled, annoyed, irritated, & disturbed. Wrath is deep indignation expressing itself in a desire to punish or extract revenge. When we are enraged we experience uncontrolled anger that often results in violence. Indignation is righteous anger aroused by what is considered unjust, mean, or shameful. Smoldering means fully or partially suppressed rage and fury. When we are incensed we are spitefully or furiously angry. And rage is a violent outburst of anger unleashed through a loss of self control. Any thoughts on these near-synonyms for anger? Even better — suggest how our beleaguered society can constructively respond to these emotions. Big thanks to this week’s sources: the OED, Merriam Webster, & Wordnik, Collins Dictionary & the 1959 Webster’s New World Dictionary of the American Language. |
I write for teens, narrate audio books, bake bread, play music, and ponder the wonder of words in a foggy little town on California's central coast.
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January 2023
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