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Fun Facts About English #58 – Why is it called that?

06/19/2020 by admin Leave a Comment

Fun Fact About English 58 Kinney Brothers Publishing

Here are ten more words with surprising origins! A few of these words appeared in previous Fun Facts About English posts, but I thought them such swell words, they deserved a second showing!

Ampersand (&)

The ampersand (&) was included in schoolbooks as the 27th character of the English alphabet until the mid 19th century. It was understood not as a vowel or consonant, but as a useful symbol, added to the hind end of the Latin alphabet, and simply known as and. Today, when we recite the ABCs, we often say “X, Y, and Z.” Two centuries ago, children’s alphabet chants included and (&) as the last “letter.” To say “X, Y, Z, and and” was a bit awkward, so the Latin phrase per se – meaning “by or in itself “- was inserted. In recitations, it sounded like this: X, Y, Z, and per se and (&). Over time, and-per-se-and slurred into ampersand, a mondegreen that we use today.

…To Boot

There are many idiomatic phrases and words that include the word boot: to be pulled up by one’s bootstraps, to get the boot, boot camp, etc. None of these has any relationship to the “extra bit of something” when we say “…to boot.”

The boot in “to boot” goes all the way back to the Old English word bōt. It means “advantage, help,” and “to making something good or better.” Over time, it also came to mean “something extra added to a trade.” Ex. “We got a great deal on the hotel room and concert tickets to boot!”

In finance, boot is something you add to a deal to make the exchange equal. For example, if you buy a car with a trade-in and also give the dealer some money, that extra money you add is called “the boot.”

Checkmate

The history of chess goes back almost 15 centuries. The game originated in northern India in the 6th century AD and spread to Persia. When the Arabs conquered Persia, chess was taken up by the Muslim world and subsequently, through the Moorish conquest of Spain, spread to Southern Europe.

“Sheikh” (شيخ‎) is the Arabic word for “chief or head of a tribe.” Players would announce “Sheikh” when the king was in check. “Māt” (مات‎) is an Arabic adjective for “dead, helpless, or defeated.” So the king is in mate when he is ambushed, at a loss, or defeated.

Fall

English Timeline Kinney Brothers Publishing

In Old English, harvest was the season when farmers gathered their crops and prepared them for storage. The word is a derivative of hærfest, an Old Norse word that means “to gather or pluck.”

By the sixteenth century, fall, a shortened version of the phrase “fall of the leaf” was used to describe the third season of the year. During this time, autumn, a word derived from Latin and Old French, was also in common use. Fall and autumn were the preferred words as more people began leaving rural farmlands to move into larger, metropolitan cities. Without farming, the term harvest became less relevant to their lives.

Today, there is a clear preference for autumn in British English and for fall in American English, though both words can be used interchangeably in both places.

Hello

As hard as it is to imagine, before the invention of the telephone in 1876, “hello” wasn’t a proper or even casual greeting whatsoever!

In his laboratories, Thomas Alva Edison would shout “Halloo!” into the mouthpiece of his newly invented strip phonograph to test the device. “Halloo” was a word commonly used to incite hounds to the chase, or as a “call” to attract the attention of someone at a great distance, similar to “Hey!”

Alexander Graham Bell's early telephone Kinney Brothers Publishing
Alexander Graham Bell’s early telephone

Mr. Edison also equipped and supplied Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone invention, a gadget that was (basically) a permanently open line without even a bell. Mr. Edison preferred “Hello” be put in the instruction manual for “calling” the other party to the line, along with “That is all” for ending the exchange. Edison reasoned that “Hello” could be heard from a distance of 10-20 feet and was better than Bell’s nautical recommendation, “Ahoy.”

G.I.

G.I. has been interpreted as standing for garrison issue, government issue, and general infantry. The true progenitor of the abbreviation is galvanized iron.

G.I. appears in Army inventories of galvanized-iron trash cans (G.I. can) and buckets from the early twentieth century. During World War I, the meaning of G.I. was extended to include heavy artillery shells and large bombs. Around this time, G.I. was applied in the “general issue” sense with G.I. shoes, G.I. soap, and G.I. brushes. During or shortly after the war, soldiers began referring to themselves as G.I.s when the abbreviation was recorded as slang for an enlisted man.

In June 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act, commonly known as the G.I. Bill. The bill provided benefits for returning World War II veterans, including funding for college, home loans, and unemployment insurance.

Cartoonist Dave Breger is credited with coining the name G.I. Joe in his weekly comic strip published in Yank magazine beginning in 1942. In 1964, U.S. toy company Hasbro debuted the military-themed G.I. Joe action figure for boys.

John Doe & Richard Roe

“John Doe” and “Richard Roe” originated during the Middle Ages! The fake names were regularly invoked in English legal instruments beginning as early as the reign of England’s King Edward III (1327–1377).

As well as legal instruments, the U.S. courts also use such names to refer to a corpse whose identity is unknown or unconfirmed. There are many variants to the names, including “John Roe,” “Jane Doe,” and “Baby Doe.”

Individuals whose real name is John or Jane Doe report difficulties and unwanted attention, such as being accused of using a pseudonym, being questioned repeatedly by airport security, or suspected of being an incognito celebrity.

Paddywhack

Paddywhack Kinney Brothers Publishing
Dried beef paddywhack.

During the Victorian era, paddywhack came to mean “a slap or a sharp blow,” in part because of its mistaken association with the word whack, an etymologically different word altogether. The original meaning of paddywhack refers to the tough neck ligament found in many four-legged animals such as sheep and cattle. Even today, this chewy and protein-rich ligament is often sold as a dried dog treat.

Red Tape

Red Tape

The idiom means “excessive bureaucracy or adherence to rules” that make conducting one’s affairs slower or more difficult. They include filling out paperwork, obtaining licenses, or having multiple people or committees approve a decision.

It’s generally believed the term originated with the Spanish administration of Charles V, King of Spain. In the early 16th century, the monarch began binding important dossiers with red twine or ribbon in an effort to give priority to particular issues and modernize the administration of his vast empire. The practice was quickly adopted by other European monarchs.

The idiom was popularized after the American Civil War when veterans’ records were tied up in pink or red binding and difficult to access.

Pipe Dream

Pipe dream originates from the 19th century and indicates the dreams experienced by opium users and the instrument they use to smoke it. Today, it refers to a fantastic hope or plan that is impossible to achieve.

The earliest known use of the idiom appeared in an 1890 issue of the Chicago Daily Tribune, referring to aerial navigation: “It has been regarded as a pipe-dream for a good many years.”

If you found this post interesting, you might also be interested in common words that were coined after notorious personalities, body parts that have unusual names, or the origins of collective nouns, such as “A murder of crows.”

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

Donald's English Classroom

When introducing young ESL students to CVC words, Donald’s English Classroom has a variety of activities ready to download and start using today! Click here to check out all our flashcards, game sets, worksheets, and more!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: Donald's English Classroom, dumbbells, esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flashcards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, fun facts about english, kinney brothers publshing

Fun Facts About English #18 – The Day After Tomorrow

08/18/2019 by admin Leave a Comment

Fun Facts About English 18 Kinney Brothers Publishing

From the Middle English word overmorwe, the influence of Norse languages can be seen when comparing the now obsolete overmorrow, or ‘day after tomorrow’, to the Dutch word overmorgen, Sweden’s overmorgon, and the German word ubermorgen.

English Timeline Kinney Brothers Publishing

In between the era of Old English and the Norman invasion in 1066, there was a period of Viking rule in England known as Danelaw. Though one may often think of the Vikings as ship-faring marauders, their governorship of the British Isles from the 9th to 11th centuries is far more nuanced. Their influence on the English language was so much that some scholars believe English should be reclassified as a Northern Germanic language (along with Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Swedish), rather than a West Germanic language (with Dutch and German). This is not only because the English language is so well peppered with Old Norse vocabulary, but the very grammatical structure of Old English itself underwent a drastic change during Danish rule. It’s speculated that about 5% of our contemporary language is owed to the Vikings. This influence may be most apparent in the Yorkshire dialect, which uses more Old Norse words in daily speech than standard English does.

The legacy of the Old Norse language is found in our days of the week, with the word Thursday (Þorsdagr), meaning “Thor’s day” after the Viking god. Although “Tuesday,” “Wednesday” and “Friday” are actually Anglo-Saxon equivalents of Norse Gods, their similarity points to the common ancestry shared by various German tribes in prehistoric northern Europe.

More vocabulary includes words of war and violence like berserk, club, and gun. The influence is evident in our social, cultural, and legal lexis as well, with words such as husband, law, thrift, and yule for the pagan holiday. Beasties of the fields and forests include bug, reindeer, and bull. Muck, mire, and dirt are so common in contemporary English, we’ve long forgotten we’re speaking in an Old Norse dialect.

Click to see larger.

Danelaw and the rule of the Vikings came to an end with the Norman invasion lead by William, the Duke of Normandy. As English moved into its Middle English period, many features of Old English, along with the influence of Old Norse vocabulary and grammar, became simplified or disappeared altogether.

If you’d like to read more about the rich history of the English language, check out my post, The History of English. You might also be interested in the cultural and linguistic influences of Greek, Spanish, and Native American dialects on the English language!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

Donald's English Classroom

Don’t wait for tomorrow to download some freebies from Donald’s English Classroom! Flashcards, charts, games, and more classroom classics are awaiting your visit!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: Donald's English Classroom, esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flashcards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, fun facts about english, kinney brothers publshing, overmorrow

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