November I'll be blogging about the alphabet and etymology
D, d: From the Phoenician
Daleth,
"door."
day: The interval between sunrise and set. The
d- rises straight up before falling to a squinting
-a-, after which
–y sinks below the word's horizon, curving back again toward
d-. The Proto Indo-European root for
day,
déi-no-,
is unmistakably kin to the root for god,
déyw-o-,
that is "shining." From these two derive, therefore, not only
date, dial, and
diary, but
deity, theology (owing to a consonant shift
d >
th) and
divine.
door: The sideways lid of a room. The ideogram for
door itself opens the word (
See D), a down-stroke with a knob on one side. We pass the portals of two
-o-s before reaching
-r, a panel with a latch on the far side closing the word. The Proto Indo-European root,
dʰwer
, leads back before doors themselves, to the late Paleolithic, evidently a meaning assigned existentially, its creators not knowing what lay behind it.
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Coming November 31st, the RETURN OF THE STOOPID CONTEST!
Published on November 04, 2011 02:44