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“How Words Enter English” RD 116

I.)  Words are created by error.

 Density  

 “Density” can be abbreviated by “D”  or “d”.

 “D or d”  = density     dord

Entered the 1934 M. Webster International Dictionary

 Mishearing can also lead to new words-

  buttonhold  –  buttonhole

  sweetard  –     sweetheart

  sparrow grass  –  asparagus

 False analogy or back formation-

  “pease porridge hot, pease porridge cold…”

  “pease” (singular)  was changed to “pea”

  “cerise”  –  became “cherries”

  Etymologically “cherries” should be both plural singular.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

II.)  Words are adopted.

A.)  Some words are adopted directly from a language/country.

  Shampoo  –  India

  Ketchup  –  China

  Slogan  –  Gaelic

  Chaparral  –  Basque

 B.)  Some words are adopted indirectly.

  Latin “bullire”  (boil or bubble)

  Old Italian  “garbuglio”  ( a mess)

  Italian (dial)  “garbuzo”

  Norman French  “garbage”

 C.)  Sometimes words reach at different times, having undergone various degrees of filtering.  Therefore, they can exist in English in 2 or more related forms.

  Canal  –  Channel

  Regard – Reward

  Poor  –  Pauper

  Here are specific examples:

   Latin "Quietus"

became

 English   “coy”       and            “quiet”

   Latin  “Sordere”  (soiled or dirty)

became

 English   “sordid”   and         “swarthy”

   D.)  English sometimes so artfully Anglicizes words that it is a surprise to learn that they are not native:

 

 English  

puny   =  puis ne   Anglo Norman

curmudgeon = coeur mechant  French  (evil heart)

 breeze   = briza   Spanish

 mayday   = m’ aidez   French (help me)

chowder   = chaudiere   French (cauldron)

bankrupt   = banca rotta  Italian (broken bench)

Strangely, we have borrowed few words from German.

 

 

III.)  WORDS ARE CREATED

Sometimes words seems to appear from nowhere-

  “hound” (hund) was used for centuries.Then suddenly “dog” appeared in the late Middle Ages.  This word was etymologically unrelated to any other known word, and it displaced “hound”.

Other words with unknown pedigrees-

 jaw  fun  noisome

 jam  crease numskull

 bad  pour  jalopy

 gloat  put

In 19th century America, the word “blizzard” suddenly appeared.  And more recently “yuppie” and “sound bites”.

Sometimes words that have fallen out of use suddenly gain prominence again-

“scrounge”

After 1900

 “seep”

Sometimes writers make up words –

Shakespeare used 17,677 words in his writing, one tenth of which had never been used before:

    barefaced, critical, castigate,

    majestic, obscene, frugal,

    dwindle, countless, gust, lonely,

    summit, pedant, hurry, hint

 Shakespeare gave us “gloomy” and the less useful “barky”.  

  Ben Jonson –   damp, defunct, clumsy

  Newton –    centrifugal, centripetal

 Sir Thomas More –  absurdity, exaggertation

 Coleridge –   intensify

G.B. Shaw –   superman

 During WW II, the U.S. Army invented a food name “funistrada” as a test word for a survey of soldiers’ dietary preferences.  Though the food didn’t exist,  “funistrada” ranked higher than eggplant and lima beans.

 

 

 

IV.) WORDS CHANGE BY DOING NOTHING

The word stays the same, but the meaning changes.

   Counterfeit –  once meant legitimate

   Brave – once implied cowardice (bravado still does.)

   Crafty – originally a word of praise

   Zeal – has lost its original pejorative sense (zealot has not)

   Girl –  In Chaucer’s day was any young person, boy or girl

  Manufacture – once meant something made by hand

  Obsequious – once meant flexible

  Notorious – once meant famous

This apparent drift in meaning is called catachresis.

Egregious –  Once meant eminent or admirable.  In the 16th century, however, it suddenly took on the opposite sense of badness and unworthiness.  Now it is used by many to mean pointless.

 According to the linguist Mario Pei, more than half of all words adopted into English from Latin now have meanings quite different from their original ones.

NICE

 1290      stupid, foolish

 1365      lascivious, wanton

 next 400 years    extravagant, elegant, strange, slothful, unmanly,       luxurious, modest, slight, precise, thin, shy, dainty, discriminating

 by 1769     pleasant, agreeable

 Sometimes an old meaning is preserved in a phrase or expression.

NECK was once widely used to describe a parcel of  land. That meaning has died out except in the expression “neck of the woods.”

TELL once meant to count.  Hence bankteller. 

Occasionally, because the sense of the word had changed, the fossil expressions are misleading.

The statement – “The exception proves the rule.”

Most people believe this means that the exception confirms the rule, but is this logical? The answer is that the earlier definition of prove was "to test."

 

 

V.)    WORDS ARE CREATED BY ADDING  OR SUBTRACTING SOMETHING.

1.)  English had more than a hundred common prefixes and suffixes.

 able, ness, ment, pre, dis, anti

It can form and reform words with a facility that sets it  apart from other tongues.

The French word mutin  (rebellion) can be changed to mutiny, mutinous, mutinously, mutineer and others. The French have still just one –  mutin

2.)  We form compounds by adding an Old English prefix or suffix to a Greek or Latin root.

   Plainness    Sympathizer

   and vice versa

   Readable   Disbelief

This inclination to use affixes provides incredible flexibility.

For example – incomprehensibility

 Root – hen

Eight affixes –  in, com, pre, s, ib, il, it, y

Or the melodic example –

quasihemidemisemiquaver =128th of a semibreve

3.)  This flexibility can cause confusion.

For example – 6 ways to make labyrinth into an adjective.

Labryinthian, Labyrinthean, Labyrinthal, Labyrinthine, Labyrinthic, Labyrinthical

 We have at least 8 ways of expressing negation.

a, anti, in, il, im, ir, un, non

Why is something unseen not unvisible, but invisible?

While something that cannot be reversed is not unreversible,  but irreversible. And a thing that is not possible is not nonpossible or antipossible, but impossible.

However, not all words with a negative prefix or suffix are negative.

For example – in = not

but not in invaluable

less = lower

but not in priceless

There are many examples of 2 forms meaning the same thing –

flammable – inflammable   fervid – perfervid

 iterate – reiterate     ravel – unravel

ebriate – inebriate   habitable – inhabitable