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A-Z of English words with surprising origins



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 27th, 2008, 11:24 AM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Miles Vaches
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Posts: 14
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...bowords126.xml

A-Z of English words with surprising origins

Last Updated: 12:01am GMT 26/11/2008

Award-winning etymologist Henry Hitchings thought he did, until he
studied the origins of English

When I set out to write a study of the history of words, I thought I
had a decent grasp of where even the most curious English ones
originate. Those with the prefix al- - as in alchemy and alcohol -
often have Arabic roots, and many seafaring terms - skipper, schooner,
land-lubber - are Dutch.
Many words in common usage, like dachshund, flamenco and tattoo, have
foreign origins

But there were plenty of surprises. Who knew that marmalade, for
instance, while eternally associated in my mind with Paddington Bear,
is in fact Portuguese? So here is an A-to-Z of some of my favourite
English words that have been absorbed from and inspired by other
languages.

A is for…

Avocado, which comes from Nahuatl, a language spoken by the Aztecs.
Their name for it, ahuacatl, also meant ''testicle".

B is for…
advertisement

Bonsai. Although we think the tree-cultivating art is Japanese, it
originated in China.

C is for…

Coleslaw. Supposedly eaten in ancient Rome, it comes from the Dutch
kool-salade (''cabbage salad").

D is for…

Dachshund, a compound of the German Dachs (''badger") and Hund
(''dog"). Originally the breed was known in Germany as Dachs Krieger,
or ''badger warrior".

E is for…

Enthusiasm. From the Greek entheos, which means ''to be within
energy", suggesting being spiritually ''possessed".

F is for…

Flamenco, from the Spanish name for a Fleming (i.e. someone from
Flanders).

G is for…

Goulash, an invention by Hungarian herdsmen whose name derives from
gulyas.

H is for…

Hotchpotch, used in Norman legal jargon to denote property collected
and then divided.

I is for…

Intelligentsia, a collective term for the intellectual class which
derives from Latin but came to us from Russian.

J is for…

Juggernaut, Sanskrit for a giant carriage used to transport an image
of the god Krishna.

K is for…

Kangaroo, from gangurru, the large black male roo in the Guugu
Yimidhirr language.

L is for…

Lilac, which comes from the Persian nilak, meaning ''of a bluish
shade".

M is for…

Mandarin. The name of the fruit feels as though it ought to be
Chinese, but may well have come from Swedish.

N is for…

Namby-pamby. Nickname of the 18th-century poet Ambrose Phillips,
coined by the satirist Henry Careybecause of his sentimental verses

O is for…

Onslaught, from the Dutch aanslag - related to a word in Old High
German for a shower.

P is for…

Penguin, a compound of two Welsh words, pen and gwyn, which mean
''head" and ''white" - even though penguins have black heads. It is
likely that 'penguin' was at one time the name of similar, now extinct
bird which had a white patch near its bill.

Q is for…

Quack can be traced to the Dutch kwaksalver, literally someone who
hawked ointments.

R is for…

Regatta, from Venetian dialect, it originally signified any kind of
contest.

S is for…

Sabotage. Supposed to derive from the tendency of striking workers to
damage machinery by throwing shoes into it - sabot being an old French
word for a wooden shoe.

T is for…

Tattoo, Captain Cook saw Polynesian islanders marking their skin with
dark pigment. Long before that the word signified a signal or
drumbeat, a Dutch expression for 'Close off the tap', used to recall
tippling soldiers.

U is for…

Umbrella, appeared in English as early as 1609 (in a letter by John
Donne). In the middle of the 18th century the device was adopted by
the philanthropist Jonas Hanway as a protection against the London
rain.

V is for…

Vanilla, ''little sheath" in Spanish.

W is for…

Walnut, a modern rendering of the Old English walhnutu ('foreign
nut'), so known because it grew mainly in Italy.

X is for…

Xebec, a little vessel with three masts, from the Arabic shabbak, a
small warship.

Y is for…

Yogurt, a mispronunciation of a Turkish word.

Z is for…

Zero, whose immediate source is French or Italian, but its origins are
in Arabic - and before that in the Sanskrit word sunya, which meant
both ''nothing" and ''desert".

• 'The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English' by Henry
Hitchings (John Murray Publishing, £16.99) is available from Telegraph
Bookshop for £14.99 + £1.25 p&p. To order, call 0844 871 1515 or go to
books.telegraph.co.uk
  #2  
Old November 27th, 2008, 11:30 AM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Ariadne
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 49
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

On 27 Nov, 11:24, Miles Vaches wrote:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...08/11/26/bowor....

A-Z of English words with surprising origins

Last Updated: 12:01am GMT 26/11/2008

Award-winning etymologist Henry Hitchings thought he did, until he
studied the origins of English

When I set out to write a study of the history of words, I thought I
had a decent grasp of where even the most curious English ones
originate. Those with the prefix al- - as in alchemy and alcohol -
often have Arabic roots, and many seafaring terms - skipper, schooner,
land-lubber - are Dutch.
Many words in common usage, like dachshund, flamenco and tattoo, have
foreign origins

But there were plenty of surprises. Who knew that marmalade, for
instance, while eternally associated in my mind with Paddington Bear,
is in fact Portuguese? So here is an A-to-Z of some of my favourite
English words that have been absorbed from and inspired by other
languages.

A is for…

Avocado, which comes from Nahuatl, a language spoken by the Aztecs.
Their name for it, ahuacatl, also meant ''testicle".

B is for…
advertisement

Bonsai. Although we think the tree-cultivating art is Japanese, it
originated in China.

C is for…

Coleslaw. Supposedly eaten in ancient Rome, it comes from the Dutch
kool-salade (''cabbage salad").

D is for…

Dachshund, a compound of the German Dachs (''badger") and Hund
(''dog"). Originally the breed was known in Germany as Dachs Krieger,
or ''badger warrior".

E is for…

Enthusiasm. From the Greek entheos, which means ''to be within
energy", suggesting being spiritually ''possessed".

F is for…

Flamenco, from the Spanish name for a Fleming (i.e. someone from
Flanders).

G is for…

Goulash, an invention by Hungarian herdsmen whose name derives from
gulyas.

H is for…

Hotchpotch, used in Norman legal jargon to denote property collected
and then divided.

I is for…

Intelligentsia, a collective term for the intellectual class which
derives from Latin but came to us from Russian.

J is for…

Juggernaut, Sanskrit for a giant carriage used to transport an image
of the god Krishna.

K is for…

Kangaroo, from gangurru, the large black male roo in the Guugu
Yimidhirr language.

L is for…

Lilac, which comes from the Persian nilak, meaning ''of a bluish
shade".

M is for…

Mandarin. The name of the fruit feels as though it ought to be
Chinese, but may well have come from Swedish.

N is for…

Namby-pamby. Nickname of the 18th-century poet Ambrose Phillips,
coined by the satirist Henry Careybecause of his sentimental verses

O is for…

Onslaught, from the Dutch aanslag - related to a word in Old High
German for a shower.

P is for…

Penguin, a compound of two Welsh words, pen and gwyn, which mean
''head" and ''white" - even though penguins have black heads. It is
likely that 'penguin' was at one time the name of similar, now extinct
bird which had a white patch near its bill.

Q is for…

Quack can be traced to the Dutch kwaksalver, literally someone who
hawked ointments.

R is for…

Regatta, from Venetian dialect, it originally signified any kind of
contest.

S is for…

Sabotage. Supposed to derive from the tendency of striking workers to
damage machinery by throwing shoes into it - sabot being an old French
word for a wooden shoe.

T is for…

Tattoo, Captain Cook saw Polynesian islanders marking their skin with
dark pigment. Long before that the word signified a signal or
drumbeat, a Dutch expression for 'Close off the tap', used to recall
tippling soldiers.

U is for…

Umbrella, appeared in English as early as 1609 (in a letter by John
Donne). In the middle of the 18th century the device was adopted by
the philanthropist Jonas Hanway as a protection against the London
rain.

V is for…

Vanilla, ''little sheath" in Spanish.

W is for…

Walnut, a modern rendering of the Old English walhnutu ('foreign
nut'), so known because it grew mainly in Italy.

X is for…

Xebec, a little vessel with three masts, from the Arabic shabbak, a
small warship.

Y is for…

Yogurt, a mispronunciation of a Turkish word.

Z is for…

Zero, whose immediate source is French or Italian, but its origins are
in Arabic - and before that in the Sanskrit word sunya, which meant
both ''nothing" and ''desert".

• 'The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English' by Henry
Hitchings (John Murray Publishing, £16.99) is available from Telegraph
Bookshop for £14.99 + £1.25 p&p. To order, call 0844 871 1515 or go to
books.telegraph.co.uk


Part of what makes English such a beautiful language.
  #3  
Old November 28th, 2008, 04:40 AM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Dick Adams[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 96
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

Ariadne wrote:


Part of what makes English such a beautiful language.


As beautiful as English is, what makes it most amazing
is that every English speaking nation has a different
dialect and some have many dialects.

Once on a train to London, I was in a conversation with
two men from the far north of Scotland, a Cockney, an
Irishman, and an Englishman from Newcastle. I kept
turning to the Englishman and asking "What did he say?"

It's several nations separated by a common language.

Dick
  #4  
Old November 30th, 2008, 09:17 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Ariadne
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 49
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

Dick Adams wrote:
Ariadne wrote:
Part of what makes English such a beautiful language.

As beautiful as English is, what makes it most amazing
is that every English speaking nation has a different
dialect and some have many dialects.

Once on a train to London, I was in a conversation with
two men from the far north of Scotland, a Cockney, an
Irishman, and an Englishman from Newcastle. *I kept
turning to the Englishman and asking "What did he say?"

It's several nations separated by a common language.

Dick


I'm very pleased that "Estuary" hasn't taken
over. But dialect words are certainly being
lost.
  #5  
Old November 27th, 2008, 12:13 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
White Spirit
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 34
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

Miles Vaches wrote:

B is for…
advertisement


I don't think it is...
  #6  
Old November 27th, 2008, 12:32 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Gerald Oliver Swift
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Posts: 432
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...bowords126.xml
When I set out to write a study of the history of words, I thought I
had a decent grasp......

• 'The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English' by Henry
Hitchings (John Murray Publishing, £16.99) is available from Telegraph
Bookshop for £14.99 + £1.25 p&p. To order, call 0844 871 1515 or go to
books.telegraph.co.uk


The author of this (sad) piece probably never even thought to look at these
two sites:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categor...foreign_origin
http://www.krysstal.com/borrow.html

Gerry


  #7  
Old November 27th, 2008, 04:50 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Hatunen
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,483
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

On Thu, 27 Nov 2008 12:32:59 -0000, "Gerald Oliver Swift"
wrote:


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...bowords126.xml
When I set out to write a study of the history of words, I thought I
had a decent grasp......

• 'The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English' by Henry
Hitchings (John Murray Publishing, £16.99) is available from Telegraph
Bookshop for £14.99 + £1.25 p&p. To order, call 0844 871 1515 or go to
books.telegraph.co.uk


The author of this (sad) piece probably never even thought to look at these
two sites:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categor...foreign_origin
http://www.krysstal.com/borrow.html


Or to have posted it in alt.usage.english ...

--
************* DAVE HATUNEN ) *************
* Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow *
* My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps *
  #8  
Old November 27th, 2008, 09:20 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 67
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

Hatunen wrote:
On Thu, 27 Nov 2008 12:32:59 -0000, "Gerald Oliver Swift"
wrote:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...bowords126.xml
When I set out to write a study of the history of words, I thought I
had a decent grasp......

• 'The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English' by Henry
Hitchings (John Murray Publishing, £16.99) is available from Telegraph
Bookshop for £14.99 + £1.25 p&p. To order, call 0844 871 1515 or go to
books.telegraph.co.uk


The author of this (sad) piece probably never even thought to look at these
two sites:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categor...foreign_origin
http://www.krysstal.com/borrow.html


Or to have posted it in alt.usage.english ...


http://etymonline.com/

--
Dirk

http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK
http://www.theconsensus.org/ - A UK political party
http://www.onetribe.me.uk/wordpress/?cat=5 - Our podcasts on weird stuff
  #9  
Old November 27th, 2008, 12:46 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

On Nov 27, 10:24*pm, Miles Vaches wrote:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...08/11/26/bowor....

A-Z of English words with surprising origins

snip

D is for…

Dachshund, a compound of the German Dachs (''badger") and Hund
(''dog"). Originally the breed was known in Germany as Dachs Krieger,
or ''badger warrior".


The sausage dogs my aunt had couldn't tackle a large mouse, let alone
a badger.

Warrior?

Compared to what?
A chihuaua?

Higgs
  #10  
Old November 27th, 2008, 03:20 PM posted to rec.travel.europe,uk.politics.misc,rec.travel.usa-canada,rec.travel.australia+nz,rec.sport.rugby.union
Jochen Kriegerowski[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 122
Default A-Z of English words with surprising origins

schrieb

The sausage dogs my aunt had couldn't tackle a large mouse, let alone
a badger.


Don't underestimate the courage of those "sausages" - which used to
be bigger than most of today's breeds.

But they weren't supposed to tackle badgers, but only to drive them
out of their burrows - hence the short legs!

Jochen
 




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