Interesting Words
-
Have some cake
What do a fancy crocheted border, a cake, and gentleness have in common? They’ve all been known as the same thing: “mignardise.” Pronounced “min-yar-dize”, it’s a word that dates back to the 1600s, and as the spelling suggests, it was borrowed directly from French. The original meaning of “mignardise” was gentle behavior — particularly in… Continue reading
-
One more round
Everybody knows what beer is, and how popular it’s been around the world for millennia. But the modern beer industry has spawned some accessories that are not quite as popular in general, but have such ardent fans and collectors that there are now English words to describe them. Take, for example, labeorphiles. These are people… Continue reading
-
The Maltese Gimmick
In some kinds of novels and movies, the plot rides on a special object that’s absolutely necessary for the story to work, but doesn’t really do anything at all — even in the story — and in some cases it doesn’t even appear. That object is a MacGuffin. He probably didn’t come up with the… Continue reading
-
Louise Pound’s words
In 1872, in Nebraska, Louise Pound was born. She grew up to be a professor of English at the University of Nebraska. More to the point, she studied folklore — specifically, slang and dialects across middle America. The thing about most of these spoken variants of language is just that; they’re spoken, and not typically… Continue reading
-
Knot or not?
“Fit to be tied” is a sort of puzzling thing to say. Is it supposed to mean you’re “fit” as in able (“all fit to go”), as in “physically fit,” as in “appropriate” (“a fit subject for discussion”), carefully measured (“fitted suit”), or something else? And what’s all this about being tied? Does it mean… Continue reading
-
Websites for words
It’s easy to see that the way we use language changes over time. Dictionaries are one way to measure this, particularly over the long term. Compare a dictionary from a century ago to a modern version and you can see changes in meanings of words as well as changes in the words that are used… Continue reading
-
Do as I say, not as I do
If Shakespeare is in the lead in adding words and phrases to English (and actually he might not be), Charles Dickens is the champion of character names, particularly for his villains. Dickens’ characters often have funny, ironic, sarcastic, or otherwise telling names, and some of them also enter the language. It’s not terribly unusual, even… Continue reading
-
Come on, show some backbone
Medical doctors often specialize in a particular area, and those specialties feature English that’s heavily populated with Latin- and Greek-originated words. For example, there might be a “thoracic” specialist focusing on the torso — that specialty comes from “thorax”, which comes from the Greek word for the breastplate part of a suit of armor. An… Continue reading
-
The wisdom in words
It’s pretty conventional, in mainline western-civilization thinking at least, to have a high regard for the combination of knowledge and judgment we’d call “wisdom.” In fact, if you were to rate English words by their positive connotation for most people, “wisdom” would probably come out somewhere near the top of the list. At least so… Continue reading
About Me
I’m Pete Harbeson, a writer located near Boston, Massachusetts. In addition to writing my own content, I’ve learned to translate for my loquacious and opinionated pup Chocolate. I shouldn’t be surprised, but she mostly speaks in doggerel. You can find her contributions tagged with Chocolatiana.