How To Use Etymological In A Sentence
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And then my etymological heart quickened in the presence of the Grand Design, for there was one more definition: "One of the cotyle-dons or lobes of the placenta in ruminating animals.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIV No 3
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In present-day usage, despite Fowler's strictures, concern for classical and linguistic purity is minimal and the coining of etymological hybrids is casual and massive.
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Algorisme being popularly reduced in OFr. to augorime, English also shows two forms, the popular augrime, ending in agrim, agrum, and the learned algorism which passed through many pseudo-etymological perversions, including a recent algorithm in which it is learnedly confused with Gr. number.'
Languagehat.com: MATHEMATICAL TERMS.
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Martin accuses the English translators of interpreting such words in their "etymological" sense, and consulting profane writers, Homer,
Early Theories of Translation
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In etymological terms, the word Maremma derives from the Latin mare, or sea, and is related to the French marais.
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Savagery, etymologically derived from the Latin word for "forest", was associated with wildness and stood in opposition to civilization.
Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
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He wrote about perspective phenomena, but the etymological synonymity of optics and perspective has often led to the misconception that he wrote about perspective constructions.
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With weapons and instruments of scholarship interspersed throughout its cabinets, this etymological play — transparent to Federico's colleagues52 — suggests that the entire Urbino studiolo may be interpreted simultaneously as an armariolum and armamentum, a witty spin on the traditional rhetorical trope of the vita activa and vita contemplativa. 53 48
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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From an etymological point-of-view, the word entrepreneur is based on the Sanskrit word "Antha Prerna," which in translation means "self-motivated.
Gregory Hosono: Entrepreneurship in 500 Words
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The author declares with aplomb that etymologically speaking the word is entirely incorrect.
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Apparently the "napa" (also "nappa") is a borrowed usage from Japanese, but I found no etymological data to support this.
Report: "McCain Family Recipes" Cribbed From The Food Network
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A huge, steaming tea-urn, called a samovar -- etymologically, a "self-boiler" -- will be brought in, and you will make your tea according to your taste.
Russia
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Ear (of corn) and ear (the organ) are examples of homonymy, because etymologically the former derives from Old English éar while the latter derives from Old English éare.
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Dharma is etymologically derived from the Sanskrit root dh meaning to bear or support.
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The words “memorial,” “memorize,” and “membership” are all etymologically linked: To memorialize is to remember, and to remember is to recall one’s own or another’s membership within a human community.
Beginner’s Grace
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The dauntingly solid volumes also offer the reader an anthology of short extracts, specific illustrations of usage and enough etymological information to satisfy the more academic reader.
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In this use, they have retained an original and etymologically correct meaning.
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Similar explanations are given by other glossarists, and thus the evidence of etymological scholarship as well as that of folk-lore support the Psychological Theory.
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Yet the 'supercede' spelling does have etymological justification and it appears in the dictionary.
Times, Sunday Times
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At some point the word slipped its etymological harness and came to mean a hanger-on, someone who could get the occasional meal from a nobleman by pleasing him with good conversation, delivering messages, or doing some other job.
Parasite Rex
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A satura was a verse composition, or “medley,” which treated of a variety of subjects in a variety of voices, and is supposed to have had a culinary etymological origin in the term lanx satura, a dish of various fruits offered to the gods.
Dorveille | Goblin Mercantile Exchange
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Anyone who baulked at recent anomalies in The Hour, when modern idioms slipped into the 50s drama, will once again be reaching for their etymological dictionaries.
Chickens: What The Inbetweeners did next
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Originally the word scribe meant "scrivener"; but rapidly it was accepted as a matter of course that the scribe who copies the Law knows the Law best, and is its most qualified expounder: accordingly the word came to mean more than it implies etymologically.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
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Tolerance is not synonymous with an absolute principle of freedom of expression, which, etymologically speaking, would be "unlinked" from any and all transcendental mandate.
Nathan Gardels: My Talk With Bernard-Henri Levy: The Empty Heaven of Democracy
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Both words derive etymologically from the Latin verb uti, to use or to receive benefit from.
Petrus Ramus
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Here follows, etymological notes and a transfiguration (though poor) into modern English.
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Etymologically speaking, a doublet is a pair of words that have the same origin but different spellings and often different meanings.
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While Horne's 2008 Edinburgh Fringe show of the same name focussed more on the personal quest - which took him all the way to the hallowed hotseat of a Vorderman-era Countdown showdown - the book covers a lot more etymological ground.
Chortle News RSS
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One of the things I've found irritating about Japanese kokugo-jiten is the absence of the kind of etymological information we take for granted in most of our English dictionaries.
Languagehat.com: JAPANESE ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY.
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From an etymological point of view, perdikis is an appropriate word for "fundament," as it is cognate with verbs for breaking wind.
Laudator Temporis Acti
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While, since thegn and thane are both archaisms, I prefer the former; not only for the same reason that induces Sir Francis Palgrave to prefer it, viz., because it is the more etymologically correct; but because we take from our neighbours the Scotch, not only the word thane, but the sense in which we apply it; and that sense is not the same that we ought to attach to the various and complicated notions of nobility which the Anglo-Saxon comprehended in the title of thegn.
Harold : the Last of the Saxon Kings — Complete
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The term byline is derived from the verb byl (it was), and etymologically signifies the recital of that which happened in times gone by.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
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What's easier to find -- on Wikipedia at least, though the OED doesn't recognize it -- is the etymological origins of the term "earworm".
Archive 2008-06-01
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Algorisme being popularly reduced in OFr. to augorime, English also shows two forms, the popular augrime, ending in agrim, agrum, and the learned algorism which passed through many pseudo-etymological perversions, including a recent algorithm in which it is learnedly confused with Gr. number.'
Languagehat.com: MATHEMATICAL TERMS.
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It just means to say, in lexicography’s telegraphic fashion, that they’re related etymologically.
Word Court
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[BE], but the term amicus curiae, literally ` friend of the court, 'is well established in Britain, and the etymological note could be misunderstood. appeal ` noun an act of appealing against something The U.S.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVI No 1
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The word was formed by a rather circuitous route, according to the OED's etymological information.
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One Hiram Codd did 'invent' a cold refreshing drink which it is claimed was called codswallop and since the Cockney slang for a glass of beer is a glass of wallop, maybe this is its etymological origin.
On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
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I merely drew an etymological distinction
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This may be etymologically equivalent to the English word funny, a kind of small boat.
History of the Philippine Islands
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Yet the 'supercede' spelling does have etymological justification and it appears in the dictionary.
Times, Sunday Times
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From time to time, of course, name and music fuse, and you get a kind of etymological perfection that's somehow close to onomatopoeia.
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What - to go back to very first principles - is at the heart of an art that is underwritten by no mere etymological coincidence: lyre as musical instrument; lyric as literary text?
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In deploring pronunciation, Mr Johnstone is right in saying there is no lexicographical or etymological reason for the change of consular to ‘conshular’, but he forgets what sounds are involved.
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The word grotto now wants exploring so, as your etymological spelunker I'll tell you that English got grotto from Italian.
Podictionary - for word lovers - dictionary etymology, trivia & history
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Which kicks off a wandering etymological and sartorial definition-fest on toques and beanies and the difference therein, wound around several more wryly delivered anecdotes.
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For those not etymologically challenged, the word canker is a doublet.
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Maley takes us through punning, naming, etymological wordplay, versification and other features of the poetic language.
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All Sign Languages are different, but such are the natural roots of many signs, in mime, or representation, that languages that are geographically and etymologically unrelated often have vocabularies which overlap.
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For example, one of the Canaanite epithets of Asherah, elat, “goddess,” is etymologically identical to the Hebrew word for the terebinth tree (ela).
Asherah/Asherim: Bible.
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Anger, it should be noted, has etymological roots both in trouble, grief and affliction.
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Despite any focus-derailing suppositions, my reference has clearly shown that the Korean nominative case marker, stripped of any nuance of deixis or definiteness, is still etymologically traced back to a demonstrative.
Nipping the PIE ergative *-s theory right in the bud
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Apparently my teachers were wrong on the etymological facts.
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[Footnote: Some geographical writers apply the term bifurcation exclusively to this intercommunication of rivers; others, with more etymological propriety, use it to express the division of great rivers into branches at the head of their deltas.
The Earth as Modified by Human Action
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A demagogue is simply, etymologically speaking, “a leader of the people.”
Is That Legal?: In the wake of the Kerry Remarks, Democrats are...WINNING.
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With him scientific scholarship really began, and his work covered the wide range of grammatical, etymological, orthographical, literary, and textual criticism.
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Incidentally, Tennyson’s “samite” (inMorte d’Arthur, as worn by the disembodied arm that belongs to the Lady of the Lake) was a brilliantly contrived exercise in etymological archaeology, and strictly speakingmeant (via the Latin samitum and, in turn, the Greek hexamiton) a six-ply silk brocade incorporating gold and silver threads, much in vogue during the Middle Ages, but let us not be deflected.
Further Pavlova
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It has divided Ruthenian writers into two great camps: the "etymological", which retains the old system of spelling, and the "phonetic", which advocates the new system.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
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Fred Shapiro, the etymological hawkshaw who edits the Oxford Dictionary of American Legal Quotations, found the earliest use to date of this useful word in a 1950 article in American Historical Review by Chester Destler, a name not easy to say fast.
No Uncertain Terms
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The character of myths is varied in different books; poetic in Genesis, juridical in Exodus, priestly in Leviticus, political in Numbers, etymological, diplomatical, and genealogical, but seldom historical, in
History of Rationalism Embracing a Survey of the Present State of Protestant Theology
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The word chowder has its etymological roots in the Latin word caldaria, meaning a place to warm things and later a cooking pot.
Cook sister!
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Aesthetics, rooted as it is etymologically in the sensate and in feeling, is primarily concerned with matter, or in the calculated arrangement of symbols, which are in themselves material.
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It exemplifies what linguists term the etymological fallacy.
Times, Sunday Times
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IV. iii.280 (107,1) [He will steal, sir, an egg out of a cloister] I know not that _cloister_, though it may etymologically signify _any_
Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies
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I cannot crawl into the minds of the youngest generation of psychologists to learn whether exceptional still carries what I must regard, personally, to be the unconscionable semantic distortion, both denotative and connotative, introduced a generation ago using "etymological" grounds for justification.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVIII No 1
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True, women were permitted to display compassion (rahamim, in Hebrew, etymologically derives from the word rehem, or womb), and they were even expected to have some empathy with human suffering; but the price they were forced to pay was the struggle to break into the literary canon.
Israeli Women's Writing in Hebrew: 1948-2004.
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More interestingly, the old (especially Scottish) word widdershins or withershins, etymologically suggesting ` a contrary direction, 'similarly refers to a movement against the apparent course of the sun and therefore considered unlucky or unnatural.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIII No 1
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The term heresy connotes, etymologically, both a choice and the thing chosen, the meaning being, however, narrowed to the selection of religious or political doctrines, adhesion to parties in Church or
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
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Read Mark's post for explanation of the history of the unetymological "abhominable"; he ends by saying "In any case, this passage is the earliest example of linguistic peeving that I can think of.
Languagehat.com
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The dauntingly solid volumes also offer the reader an anthology of short extracts, specific illustrations of usage and enough etymological information to satisfy the more academic reader.
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I personally find the accepted etymological cognate to Pgm *ansuz in Avestan anhu quite convincing.
The 'god' word in Europe
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Ach" stands as the lower limit in German of voice enlisted, made letteral, as discourse, sound made not just sensed but sensible — what Agamben calls in the etymological sense "literalized" ( "Philosophy and Linguistics" 65).
Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
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Moving into clearer etymological waters, we encounter the paradox that whilst Frenchmen have consistently dismissed Breton as a worthless baragouin ` patois, gibberish, 'the origin of that pejorative is undoubtedly Breton.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol X No 2
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As regards the first argument, it is significant that Socrates nowhere in the dialogue admits any case in which the inappropriate elements in a name outnumber the appropriate ones (hence item 19 in the list of etymological principles, section 3 above).
Plato's Cratylus
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Ne + cedere is the root = “not” + “withdraw” — in other words the etymological premise of the idea in the word is a PRESUMPTION of deference or cession of power, which cession or deference is foregone or abandoned ONLY in the “necessary” case and then only to the degree “proper” or “belonging to” the isolated occasion or circumstance giving rise to the necessity that overcomes the presumption.
The Volokh Conspiracy » The proper understanding of “Necessary and Proper”:
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Although the word comrade has the etymological derivatives from the Spanish “camarada” or in English “chamber mate”, which would insinuate a relationship between us that exists beyond the platonic one.
Neutering The Gender Of Language « Unambiguously Ambidextrous
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In forwarding this despatch Lord Milner made the apposite comment that the propriety of employing the term suzerainty to express the rights possessed by Great Britain is an "etymological question," and Mr. Chamberlain, replying on December 15th, accepts President Krüger's declaration that he is willing to abide by the articles of the Convention, reasserts the claim of suzerainty, declines to allow foreign arbitration, and demands the immediate fulfilment of Article IV.
Lord Milner's Work in South Africa From its Commencement in 1897 to the Peace of Vereeniging in 1902
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Mount Orontes is to be recognized in the modern Elwend or Erwend -- a word etymologically identical with _Oront-es_ -- which is a long and lofty mountains standing out like a buttress from the Zagros range, with which it is connected towards the north-west, while on every other side it stands isolated, sweeping boldly down upon the flat country at its base.
The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 3. (of 7): Media The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea, Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
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I wouldn’t blame you; this is a commonly-held belief known as the etymological fallacy.
2010 January « Motivated Grammar
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Notes: the term ‘meddle ‘is used by the custumal in a context that reflects etymological associations: the prohibition of middlemen in the retail of shellfish.
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This herd has turned with much greater zest to the science of language: here in this wide expanse of virgin soil, where even the most mediocre gifts can be turned to account, and where a kind of insipidity and dullness is even looked upon as decided talent, with the novelty and uncertainty of methods and the constant danger of making fantastic mistakes -- here, where dull regimental routine and discipline are desiderata -- here the newcomer is no longer frightened by the majestic and warning voice that rises from the ruins of antiquity: here every one is welcomed with open arms, including even him who never arrived at any uncommon impression or noteworthy thought after a perusal of Sophocles and Aristophanes, with the result that they end in an etymological tangle, or are seduced into collecting the fragments of out-of-the-way dialects -- and their time is spent in associating and dissociating, collecting and scattering, and running hither and thither consulting books.
On the Future of our Educational Institutions
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The table below contains all of the 116 distinct bynames found in the poll tax data, together with etymological notes on as many of them as I can identify.
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The term metaphysical, originating with Dryden, and used by Johnson with a slight difference, may be easily miscomprehended by any one who chooses to forget its legitimate application both etymologically and by usage to that which comes, as it were, behind or after nature.
A History of Elizabethan Literature
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The Merriam-Webster Online states that "liaise" is an example of a "back-formation," through which a new word is extracted from another, perfectly legitimate word on the assumption that it must exist, etymologically, although it does not.
Yankee Pot Roast
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The term trust has been cited in history as far back as the 13 th century Middle English, but it has etymological origins even earlier with regard to expressions of loyalty and faithfulness (Mollering, Bachmann, & Lee, 2004).
BeyeNETWORK Content
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Baskets known in Ruvu communities included the proto-Bantu era * - túndù, the proto-Kaskazi period palm fiber * - sege, as well as small * - kapo baskets. 84 Furthermore, because its etymological root traces to a Forest-Savanna Bantu verb "to measure," Ruvu * - gelo baskets were likely used to measure goods.
Societies, Religion, and History: Central East Tanzanians and the World They Created, c. 200 BCE to 1800 CE
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Etymologically I think lex is right with the first one.
“In the Tank”
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I totally agree with your etymological assessment of the term amateur, I will always be an amateur, never a professional. lichanos
I urge you « Jahsonic
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This school is in the Los Angeles basin, the epicenter of Southern Californian car culture, the etymological origin of the term ‘smog,’ and a metroplex that arm-wrestles Houston every year for the crown of the most polluted city in the USA.
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The detail of the inconsistencies in the etymological treatment and in the alloseme/lemma status of the quintile and sextile that you mention is no less diabolical!
1880s English | Linguism | Language Blog
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Peter T Daniels a Semiticiste and regular at sci.lang, he say: "Etymological dictionary for Arabic" doesn't make much sense, since the Arabic lexicon is so much vaster than that of any other Semitic language, since lexicography has been going on for over a thousand years, and etymological dictionaries of all the other Semitic languages mine the native Arab lexica for more or less plausible candidates for cognacy.
Languagehat.com: ARABIC ETYMOLOGY.
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Lots of the most interesting etymological claims that are bandied about on the internet and in the popular press are bunk.
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Such a figure is literally and etymologically hysterical, as it is excessively feminized; it is also psychoanalytically hysterical.
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Thus, at an etymological level, leaves and paper, and leaves and books are deeply connected.
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All these meanings have been associated with the notion of trance, a word etymologically rooted to the Middle English traunce, the Old French transe, and the Latin transpire, which refer to a passage or means of going over or across.
The Bushman Way of Tracking God
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But it was just the Armenian word, without any history of angry usage, just a word etymologically-based on the root negro/black.
Will sensitivity about racism turn racism into a taboo subject?
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So it may eventually happen that hypercorrect forms are accepted as normal, notwithstanding their dubious etymological provenance.
Interesting Thing of the Day
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Benet claimed through substantial research and etymological comparison that the proper translation for "kaneh bosm" is cannabis.
Phelps and Obama-- leading the way Towards legalizing Marijuana.
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Often referred to as vellum, which etymologically means calfskin, parchment results from soaking the skins in lime and water, scraping, and drying them while stretched.
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It's fitting that the name, from the Latin for mirror (the museum is housed in a former observatory), is close etymological kin to speculum, an instrument used, as every woman knows, to dilate the opening of a body cavity for examination.
Boing Boing
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The etymological meaning of the word has long died out.
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Now this second etymological explanation within the same chapter for the name Edom does not conflict with the first (v. Ge 25: 25).
Exposition of Genesis: Volume 1
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We have no comprehensive dictionary, no etymological dictionary, no dictionaries of regionalisms, no modern thesaurus.
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There is etymological debate surrounding the word.
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The term jubilee year (Vulg. annus Jubilei, or Jubileus) is of Hebrew origin, the etymological meaning of which is, in all probability,
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 8: Infamy-Lapparent
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Gratification" and "gratitude" have the same etymological root.
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My etymological dictionary suggests an Iranic origin as also possible for the latter, but the lack of cognates in Permic etc. languages makes this seem dubious.
Never judge a book by its nom de plume
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So, for instance, the older and etymologically correct but less common petrification has achieved great popularity from its use in D&D and is now over twice as common on the Internet (41000 to 17400 Google pages) over the formerly standard petrifaction.
From the Dungeon to the Dictionary « Isegoria
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Horne Tooke, John (1736 – 1812): a philologist and radical whose etymological work The Diversions of
Index of People
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This might bespeak a larger appetite on the part of Oliver Hardy and if so there might be an etymological explanation for Ollie's quote.
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There are many great etymological books out there that are not listed here.
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But unlike its etymological cousins, "scapegoat" and "fall guy," the phrase suggests a degree of intimacy between the blamer and the blamed.
‘Under the Bus’
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“Dutch, the closest living relative of English, lost the d of what is etymologically the same word en centuries ago,” replied the foremost modern interpreter of Denmark’s grammarian and phoneticist Otto Jespersen, “and it gets along fine without it.”
No Uncertain Terms
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Etymologically, the word biretta is Italian in origin and would more correctly be written beretta (cf. however the French barette and the Spanish bireta).
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
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The word oblation, from the supine of the Latin verb offero ( "to offer"), is etymologically akin to offering, but is, unlike the latter, almost exclusively restricted to matters religious.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
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There is sometimes an alternation between f and v in grammatically or etymologically related words.
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It does not follow that the man who speaks of "the spacious firmament on high," is under so considerable a delusion as to suspect that the firmament is a firm thing; nor does it follow that Moses thought that "rakia" was a solid substance either, -- even if solidity was the prevailing etymological notion in the word, and even if the Hebrews were no better philosophers than Mr. Goodwin would have us believe.
Inspiration and Interpretation: Seven Sermons Preached Before the University of Oxford: With Preliminary Remarks: Being an Answer to a Volume Entitled "Essays and Reviews."
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For it, he drew on Renaissance technical terms, derivations, compounds, archaisms, polysemy, etymological meanings, and idioms.
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These speculators were called "farmers-general," -- France could be called their farm [Footnote: Etymologically, the French word for farm (_ferme_) was not necessarily connected with agriculture, but signified a fixed sum (_firma_) paid for a certain privilege, such as that of collecting a tax.] and money its produce.
A Political and Social History of Modern Europe V.1.
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It is uncouth no longer; if it had never existed, perhaps intensate would now have been so no longer, uncouthness being, both etymologically and otherwise, a matter of strangeness as against familiarity.
Formations.
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Most of the proofs are based on biological or historical evidence - but I did find one etymological aspect: while many claim that the name "shibolet shual" comes the spike, shibolet, of plant looking like the tail of a fox, shual, (and we find the phrase "foxtail" with a similar meaning in English), Feliks believes that the name comes from the fact that foxes like eating the softer two-rowed barley more than other grains, in the same way that invei shual ענבי
English-writing Israeli-bloggers
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Marijuana treats us to an awareness of a simultaneity of sensations, a sort of meta-pleasure, which is not surprising, given the roots of the term 'ecstasy,' as Rich Doyle writes: "Ecstasy" comes etymologically from the experience of "being beside ourselves.
Jason Silva: On Creativity, Marijuana and "a Butterfly Effect in Thought"
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'Prole' is etymologically derived from 'proletariat'.
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This may be etymologically equivalent to the English word funny, a kind of small boat.
History of the Philippine Islands
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According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word petard came into substantive use in 1598, so it†™ s fair to speculate that viewers of Hamlet (first performed c. 1600-01) may have been aware of the word†™ s etymological root in the French pétard, from the verb péter, to fart.
Think Progress » Report: Fitzgerald Focusing On Direct Cheney Involvement
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Etymological analysis sought to explain the meaning of individual words within sentences.
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All these we have included under the term phantasm; a word which, though etymologically a mere variant of phantom, has been less often used, and has not become so closely identified with visual impressions alone.
Henry Sidgwick
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The etymological closeness of the Sanskrit and English words is striking.
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Algorisme being popularly reduced in OFr. to augorime, English also shows two forms, the popular augrime, ending in agrim, agrum, and the learned algorism which passed through many pseudo-etymological perversions, including a recent algorithm in which it is learnedly confused with Gr. number.'
Languagehat.com: MATHEMATICAL TERMS.
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Aesthetics, rooted as it is etymologically in the sensate and in feeling, is primarily concerned with matter, or in the calculated arrangement of symbols, which are in themselves material.
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The Greek ‘graphein’ (to write) and ‘grate’, ‘grind’ and even ‘scratch’ are probably cognate etymologically.
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What may be happening here is that the two rather learned terms imprimatur and imprint (both obviously close etymological relatives) blend in some speakers 'vocabulary, and the imprimatur > impremature substitution extends out to
The Eggcorn Database - Atom Feed
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Written language often preserves etymological and morphological facts about the vocabulary that are lost in pronunciation.
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The word dukkha etymologically means a 'bitter space' and this seems to me to have echoes in such ideas as 'the dark night of the soul'.
Lotusinthemud