A Word A Day: A Romp through Some of the Most Unusual and Intriguing Words in English
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About this ebook
-Barbara Wallraff
Senior Editor at The Atlantic Monthly and author of Word Court
Praise for A Word a Day
"AWADies will be familiar with Anu Garg's refreshing approach to words: words are fun and they have fascinating histories. The people who use them have curious stories to tell too, and this collection incorporates some of the correspondence received by the editors at the AWAD site, from advice on how to outsmart your opponent in a duel (or even a truel) to a cluster of your favorite mondegreens."
-John Simpson, Chief Editor, Oxford English Dictionary
"A banquet of words! Feast and be nourished!"
-Richard Lederer, author of The Miracle of Language
Written by the founder of the wildly popular A Word A Day Web site (www.wordsmith.org), this collection of unusual, obscure, and exotic English words will delight writers, scholars, crossword puzzlers, and word buffs of every ilk. The words are grouped in intriguing categories that range from "Portmanteaux" to "Words That Make the Spell-Checker Ineffective." each entry includes a concise definition, etymology, and usage example-and many feature fascinating and hilarious commentaries by A Word A Day subscribers and the authors.
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A Word A Day - Anu Garg
Introduction
This is a book of words. But then, all books are books of words. This book is an expression of the joy of words, the magic of words, the music of words. It’s a book of words arranged in many thematic bouquets, each bouquet collecting words of a kind. Words that make us laugh, words that make us feel incredulous, words that pack a whole story in just a few letters, words that delight us, and words of many other shapes, sizes, and hues.
Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the word words is an anagram of sword. Well-used words cut through ambiguity and confusion like a sharp sword in the hands of an expert swordsman. Like a fencer with a whole supply of moves, feints, and parries, a person with a large and varied vocabulary at her command can find just the right word for the occasion. Whether we realize it or not, words touch something deep within all of us, for what would we be without words? Words move us, inspire, animate, motivate, challenge, and delight us. It’s what this whole book is about.
Take the word delight, for instance. Are we put into dark when we are de-lighted
? Not exactly. The word delite might sound like a corruption of the word brought forth by some marketer, but that’s the source of the word. The word delight came to us from earlier delite, which ultimately is from the same source as the word delectable.
Would you believe that lettuce is a cousin of milk; that corduroy literally means the cloth of the king
(and hence the king of cloth?); that salary comes to us from salt; that trivia takes its origins from cross-roads; that when you flex your muscles, you are moving mice,
etymologically speaking; that cockamamie draws inspiration from fake tattoos; that carnival rose from the idea of taking meat away during Lent; that cynic has its origins in canines. Countless other words have similarly surprising derivations.That’s the marvel of words, leading us to unexpected corners waiting to be discovered.
Then there is arrangement of letters. Not one or two, but dozens of words have all five vowels in them. And there are many with all five vowels in order, such as facetious and abstemious, to name two examples. There are words within words; for instance, tiger is inside dentigerous (one having teeth). And there are semordnilaps, or words that are formed by reversing other words, such as drab and bard.
Going down from words to letters, did you know that all continents begin and end with the same letter? And that all, except Europe, begin and end with the letter A? Isn’t it interesting to know that Q is the only letter in the alphabet that does not appear in the name of any state of the United States?
How do you remember the difference between the two kinds of camels, dromedaries and bactrians? Easy! Notice the beginning letters: one bump in a D, two bumps in a B. When you visit a cave and marvel at nature’s enchanting formations, which are stalagmites and which ones stalactites? Stalagmites are formed on the ground while stalactites hang from the ceiling.
Open the dictionary and feast on the words. The bigger the better—an unabridged is the best—and discover that world where each word is a world in itself. Mark Twain, that master of words, once jocularly observed about a dictionary, I have studied it often, but I never could discover the plot.
Well, a dictionary is a place where each word has a plot, a whole history behind it. Each word has its own biography—we call it etymology. They change, they evolve, they adapt, they die, and they get revived.
Even though this book presents made-up examples, all of these words can be found in the pages of popular newspapers, magazines, books, and web sites—though not that often. That’s to say that these are real words, not obscure words picked from a word museum. I hope you enjoy them.You’re invited to join my daily romp through the world of words. You can subscribe to A.Word.A.Day (AWAD) at http://wordsmith.org. I look forward to your comments and suggestions about the experiences of words at anu@wordsmith.org.
Welcome to the world of words!
CHAPTER 1
Animal Words
It’s a blessing to have a child at home. As a parent, I strive to answer my daughter Ananya’s incessant questions about the moon and earthworms and clouds and trees and bears as truthfully as I can. Our investigations into these seemingly mundane matters often reveal insights that are learning experiences for both of us. But there are times when my thoughts are elsewhere and I simply answer the question Why?
with, Because that’s how God made them.
I didn’t know the joke was on me until the evening I found the corner of our living room wall scribbled with bright shades of crayons. When questioned why we had that mural on the wall, she simply replied, Because that’s how God made it.
Well, if we were to ask why a crab moves crabwise or sideways, that’d be a pretty good answer: Because that’s how God (or nature, depending on how your beliefs run) made crabs. Because that’s how their legs bend. That’s how their muscles flex. That’s how they’ve adapted. That’s how they survive as a species. And that’s how we got a synonym for the word sideways in our dictionary. If we were to look up the term humanwise in a crab’s dictionary, chances are it would mean sideways.
Here are a few words derived from animals (the only animal-based products we use around here).
crabwise (KRAB-wyz)
adjective 1. Sideways. 2. In a cautious or roundabout manner.
From the sideways movement of crabs.Also see cancrine (chapter 31).
• And then in a true action-film manner, the hero began moving crabwise along the wall while scanning the alley for the villain.
testudinate (te-STOOD-in-ayt), also testudinal or testudinarian
adjective 1. Slow-moving, like a turtle. 2. Curved like the carapace (shell) of a turtle; vaulted.
noun A turtle.
From Late Latin testudinatus, from Latin testudo (tortoise).
• I kinda find his slow pace and curved back alluring,
the young fashion model fawned about the testudinate geriatric who just happened to be an oil magnate as well.
Test U Do?
In ancient Rome, on certain occasions when the legionaries were under attack, they would clump together and hold their shields outward, with the central men holding their shields above their heads. In this way the shields acted like a shell around the cohort, and the name of this formation was testudo.
—Julie Murdoch, South Perth, Australia
gadfly (GAD-fly)
noun 1. One who persistently annoys or one who prods into action. 2. Any of the various types of flies that bite livestock.
002Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language.
—LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN, philosopher (1889-1951)
From gad (a goad for cattle), from Middle English, from Old Norse gaddr.
• The newspaper columnist saw himself as a public gadfly, keeping politicians honest and running critical articles about them when they weren’t.
kangaroo court (kang-guh-ROO kort)
noun A mock court set up with disregard to proper procedure to deliver a judgment arrived at in advance.
From the Old West to the Spanish Inquisition to the Salem Witch Trials, kangaroo courts have made their appearances throughout history.While theories abound regarding the origin of this expression, lexicographers haven’t found a convincing proof of one or another, and its derivation can be tagged with the succinct origin unknown.
But that doesn’t stop us from speculating. Some believe it comes from the animal itself—a funny-looking creature that bounces around without appearing to achieve anything.Then some think it is so named because it jumps to conclusions. According to one line of thought, the British didn’t respect the Australian penal colony enough to give them due process of law, and with that legacy we name it so. Or maybe it is because this setup describes courts whose opinions wander all over the place
—opinions that change so much from case to case that the court precedent bounces
like this member of the marsupial family. Others surmise that the term originated from the Gold Rush era involving the trial of some Aussie miners.
Poetry is a deal of joy and pain and wonder, with a dash of the dictionary.
—KAHLIL GIBRAN, mystic, poet, playwright, and artist (1883-1931)
Jumping to Conclusions
I have known, from youthful days in Tennessee, a kangaroo court to be one which sets its own rules of procedure, and more specifically one in which the plaintiff and the defendant can find themselves in switched positions with the plaintiff being found guilty and the defendant innocent, and not necessarily of the initial charge.
—R. David Cox, Galax, Virginia
waspish (WOS-pish)
adjective 1. Like a wasp, in behavior (stinging) or in form (slender build). 2. Easily annoyed; irascible; petulant. 3. Of or pertaining to a WASP (White Anglo Saxon Protestant).
From wasp, from Middle English waspe, from Old English waesp, from waeps.
• When she called him waspish in her most charming voice, the cranky, lean fellow didn’t know what attribute of his she found so alluring.
004He is a hard man who is only just, and a sad one who is only wise.
—VOLTAIRE, philosopher (1694-1778)
CHAPTER 2
Latin Terms
Although a dead
language, Latin remains alive through its extensive vocabulary, which is used in fields such as medicine, science, and law, and also via the numerous words that the English language has borrowed and built upon. And it is still the official language of the Vatican.
We use Latin expressions for many purposes, sometimes to sound more literary and at times for idioms that pack a concept in just a few words that would otherwise take a few sentences. Quid pro quo, for example, tells us in only three words the idea of you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours.
Here are a few terms from Latin that are often used in the English language.
Found in Translation
I recall one of my history professors telling the class about his friend who taught the Late Middle Ages and Early Modern period of Spanish history. My professor didn’t know Spanish and had no great desire to learn yet another language, and his counterpart felt the same way about American English, but they quickly discovered that both knew Latin and they corresponded for thirty years in Latin! So perhaps the reports of Latin’s death, like Mark Twain’s, have been greatly exaggerated!
—Rhonda L. Stroud, Seattle, Washington
quid pro quo (KWID pro kwo), plural quid pro quos or quids pro quo
noun Something given or taken in exchange for something else.
From Latin quid (something) pro (for) quo (something).
• The campaign contributors knew that the members of congress are pros at quid pro