I was on another thread and got deep into learning about the history of certain words and thought I’d post here. What word history origins / facts do you know?
I’ll start with two that I recently came across:
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“‘Wer’ (meaning ‘man’) came from Old High German with the Anglo Saxons 1,500 years ago, and was part of Old English. It then became ‘were’ in Middle English and remains as part of werewolf (‘man wolf’) in modern English.” (Source: [email protected])
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“Sculptors in antique Rome could fix mistakes they made by mixing marble dust with wax. If a sculptor was especially gifted and made no mistakes that needed fixing, they would market their art as “sin cera”, which means “without wax”, which is where the word “sincere” comes from.” (Source: [email protected])
I’ll borrow this from my contribution to a discussion yesterday, but Shakespeare coined fewer phrases than you’d think, and probably not very many words at all (though certainly more than the average schlub):
As a further aside, he’s one of the best-researched non-noble lives of his era, and the “Authorship question” is the equivalent of History Channel Ancient Aliens “documentaries.” It’s titillating nonsense put out by snobs who can’t fathom that their literary idol was not an elite (while still definitely privileged compared to the truly common person).