During November, I'll be blogging about etymology and the origins of the alphabet.
E, e: From the Phonecian
He, an ideogram shaped like a waving flag, meaning "prayer" or possibly "jubilation." (See
hallelujah?
Haleil "praise"+
ya "Yahweh.") If the order of the Phoenician alphabet reflects the progress of the Late Stone Age, mankind...
Built Shelter
Domesticated Animals
and Built a Door
for the Shelter
Developed Weapons
before anyone got around to being grateful to a higher power.
English: The language this happens to be written in, as well as the name of the people who speak it, from the Old English
englisc or
anglisc, "of the Angles." It seems unlikely that
Angle, as in
Anglican,
Anglophile, and
Anglo-Saxon, would have anything to do with the geometric concept
angle, but in fact, it does.
Angle
comes from
Angul
, an angular-shaped spit of land, now Swasburg, whence the Angles migrated, the word's meaning taking an abrupt right turn once they arrived in what is now
England - "land of the Engles, or Angles."
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Coming November 31st, the RETURN OF THE STOOPID CONTEST!
Published on November 05, 2011 10:01