Authors: Mark Forsyth
Tags: #Language Arts & Disciplines, #linguistics, #Reference, #word connections, #Etymology, #historical and comparative linguistics
So are all bucks really deer? Almost.
Back to Howth Castle and Environs
So the humble buck-deer is the source of all things
buck
, with one exception.
Buckwheat
, which looks like it should be the wheat that bucks eat, has nothing whatsoever to do with deer.
The leaves of buckwheat look very similar to the leaves of a beech tree. The German for
beech
is
Buche
and so
buckwheat
is really
beechwheat
.
Beech trees were important to the ancient Germans. Beechwood is soft, so soft that it’s easy to carve things in it, and that’s exactly what the Germans used to do. Beech,
buche
or
bok
, as it was called in Old High German, was the standard material for writing on. Even when wood was finally overtaken by the newfangled invention of parchment, the Germans kept the name, and so did the English.
Bok
became
boc
became
book
.
This is a book. The glorious insanities of the English language mean that you can do all sorts of odd and demeaning things to a book. You can cook it. You can bring a criminal to it, or, if the criminal refuses to be brought, you can throw it at him. You may even take a leaf out of it, the price of lavatory paper being what it is. But there is one thing that you can never do to a book like this. Try as and how you might, you cannot turn up for it. Because a
turn-up for the books
[continued on page 1]
Quizzes
In Lewis Carroll’s book
Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There
(often erroneously referred to as
Alice Through the Looking Glass
), Humpty Dumpty tells Alice: ‘There’s glory for you.’
‘I don’t know what you mean by “glory,”’ Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. ‘Of course you don’t – till I tell you. I meant “there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!”’
‘But “glory” doesn’t mean “a nice knock-down argument”,’ Alice objected.
‘When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean – neither more nor less.’
‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
However, as the greatest joy a human being can achieve in this sorrowful world is to get one up on his or her fellow man or woman by correcting their English, and as I have spent far too long consulting dictionaries, here’s a list of some common English words and what the dictionaries say they actually mean:
Burgeon
– To bud
Blueprint
– The absolutely final plans that are sent to the factory
Backlash
– The small period of inactivity when a system of cogs is reversed
Celibate
– Unmarried
Compendium
– Brief summary
Condone
– Forgive
Coruscate
– To glow intermittently
Decimate
– To reduce by 10 per cent
Enormity
– Crime
Effete
– Exhausted
Fulsome
– Over the top
Jejune
– Unsatisfying
Noisome
– Annoying
Nauseous
– Causing nausea
Pleasantry
– Joke
Pristine
– Unchanged
Refute
– To utterly disprove
Restive
– Refusing to move (obviously)
Scurrilous
– Obscene
Swathe
– The area of grass cut with one stroke of a scythe
As you will have learnt from the preceding stroll through the English language, it’s almost impossible to guess where a word has come from or where it’s going to go to. So here, just to puzzle you, are a series of quizzes in which you have to guess where a word has come from or where it’s going to go to.
We shall start with some names of famous people. Except that I haven’t given you the names, I’ve given you the etymological meaning. So, for example, if I were to write
God of war and man of peace
, the answer would be me, Mark Forsyth, because
Mark
comes from
Mars
, the Roman god of battles, and
Forsyth
is Gaelic for
man of peace
. Got that? Good. Let us begin. (Answers below.)
Politicians of the last hundred years
Music
Glamour
Writers
And the answers are:
Politicians of the last hundred years
Music
Glamour