November I'll be blogging about the alphabet and etymology.
[image error]
C, c From the Phoenician
Gimel,
"sling" or "throwing-stick." Hence, the three great achievements of the Neolithic, as represented by the first three letters of the alphabet, were domestication of animals, man-made shelter, and warfare.
calque: A word formed by translation from another language. Typically English adopts words wholesale, as in
déjà vu, amuck, or
kindergarten, but
calques especially picturesque or apropos phrases, as in "
losing face" from the Chinese
diū liǎn
, or
"scapegoat," possibly a mistranslation of
azazel
, a demon of Hebrew mythology, for
'ez ozel
, "the goat that escapes."
cliché: I will forego the whimsical catalogue of
clichés a lesser lexicographer would mistakenly think witty and original. French printers called a ready-made phrase cast as a single piece of type a
cliché, onomatopoeia for the liquid slap and hiss as a hot letter mold drops into cold water.
---
Coming November 30th, the RETURN OF THE STOOPID CONTEST!
Published on November 03, 2011 04:32