Word-Origin Wednesday is the weekly podcast that walks you through a word origin in five minutes or less.
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"Ghost" is a pretty old word. "Ghoul," as an English word, not so much.Par The Grammar Geek
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The names of "October" and a few other months make a lot more sense if we look at Latin and the Roman calendar.Par The Grammar Geek
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The everyday meaning of "sympathy" has shifted over the years, but it's always had some connection to its Latin and Greek roots.Par The Grammar Geek
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Before it entered everyday English, "hysterical" was medical Latin.Par The Grammar Geek
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Do you say "autumn" or "fall" to describe the season between summer and winter? Get the lowdown on the history of both words.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Dead" and "duck" go way back, but the term "dead duck" is only a couple of centuries old.Par The Grammar Geek
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The often miswritten and mispronounced "landlubber" goes back a few centuries.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Nice" has had at least a dozen definitions over the last few centuries.Par The Grammar Geek
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The Modern English "peruse" came from the Middle English "peruse" . . . or maybe it came from French.Par The Grammar Geek
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With Labor Day approaching, let's look at "factory" and "manufacturing." They were both borrowed from Latin.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Escalate" is fairly new word, and the current definition has been around since just the 1950s.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Put up your dukes," which has been around since at least the 1800s, is one example of Cockney rhyming slang.Par The Grammar Geek
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The transition from "ekename" to "nickname" is a fine demonstration of the transition from Middle English to Modern English.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Posh," as it is used today, first appeared in print a little more than a century ago. But where did it come from?Par The Grammar Geek
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It took several languages to bring "karaoke" to English in the 1970s.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Honey" and "moon" are very old. "Honeymoon" is relatively new, meaning it's a mere 500 years old.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Aioli" comes from French, as do the words for many prepared foods.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Mascara" is linked to many words from many languages, many of which go back centuries before commercially available mascara hit store shelves.Par The Grammar Geek
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The word "liar" goes way back. As it turns out, people have been lying for a long time.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Salary" is related to something in your kitchen, and it's not celery.Par The Grammar Geek
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Like a lot of food-related words, "omelet" comes from French. Its origin has nothing to do with eggs.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Humble" came from French, which took it from Latin. It's always meant "lowly," although that's not how people use it today.Par The Grammar Geek
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A lavaliere is a fancy pendant. It's also a type of microphone. To find the origin, we go back to 17th-century France.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Memorial" comes from Latin and is related to a slew of other English words, including "remember" and "memorandum."Par The Grammar Geek
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"Waxing," "waning," "crescent" and "gibbous" go back a long, long time.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Whiskey" has been through some changes in its journey to English from (no surprise) Gaelic.Par The Grammar Geek
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May 1 is May Day (two words) in the United States. Don't confuse it with "mayday" (one word), the distress call for pilots.Par The Grammar Geek
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The often misused "verbiage" has been around for a few centuries, and its corrupt offspring, "verbage," is older than you might think.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Easter" goes back to Old English and then goes back further. Celebrations of spring are older than Jesus.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Rhythm" and "rhyme" are related words, both in meaning and etymology.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Stay" and "home" and "parent" are old words, going back centuries. Words to describe someone who tends to the home and children are also very old. English speakers began using the term "stay-at-home parent" very recently.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Leverage" has been in the English language since the 18th century, but its position in everyday corporate speak is fairly recent.Par The Grammar Geek
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Tea has been around for thousands of years, but English speakers didn't need a word for it until they started trading it in the 1590s.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Butt" and "cheek" have been around for centuries. It took a while for English speakers to put them together.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Ambulance" has been an English word since the 18th century, before motor vehicles, and is related to the word "amble."Par The Grammar Geek
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"Selfie" is a fairly new word, but its root word and suffix are centuries old. Some people don't like "selfie," but resistance is futile.Par The Grammar Geek
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By tracing "hiatus," meaning a break, back to its ancient Proto-Indo European roots, we find it has some modern cousins with similar meanings but very different sounds.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Penultimate" and its cousin, "ultimate," both come from Latin. As the meaning of "ultimate" shifts, poor "penultimate" is being left behind.Par The Grammar Geek
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The current popular meaning of "carnival" goes back to the 1920s, but the original meaning, which involves meat, goes back centuries.Par The Grammar Geek
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We've been using the word "buck" as slang for money since the 1850s. There are two theories to explain why.Par The Grammar Geek
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The slang term "booze" goes back many years as a noun and many more years as a verb. And what's a boozeroo?Par The Grammar Geek
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The proper noun "Lent" evolved from a series of longer words ultimately related to spring.Par The Grammar Geek
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On Valentine's day, you might send a valentine to your valentine. All of those uses share the same origin.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Complicit" is Dictionary.com's 2017 Word of the Year. It's less than a century old, but the original "complicity" is much older.Par The Grammar Geek
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Which came first, "OK" or "okay"? And what does Martin Van Buren have to do with it?Par The Grammar Geek
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The American Dialect Society named "fake news" its 2017 Word of the Year. The term has been around for a while, but the past few years, it seems to be everywhere.Par The Grammar Geek
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"Unkempt," which means "sloppy or disheveled," goes back centuries. It's not the same as "unkept."Par The Grammar Geek
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