O, o: From the Canaanite
aiyn "eye," although in the modern alphabet, it more resembles the open mouth of someone pronouncing the letter. Its simple shape has changed not at all in thousands of years. The Greeks called it
mikron, "small."
onomatopoeia: A word, which, strangely enough, does not sound the least bit like what it means.
orgasm: The kinship to
organ is more distant than we are first tempted to believe.
Organ derives from the Greek root
organo- and ultimately from
erg "to work," and
orgasm from
orge, "impulse," and ultimately the Proto-Indo European root
–uerg, "to swell." Partridge notes that the –asm ending, while associated with abstract nouns, seems to connote more vigorous activity than –ism: to wit,
orgasm, enthusiasm, spasm. (Origins. Greenwich House, New York: 1983)
oxymoron: A self-contradictory phrase such as "pretty ugly," the word itself is an
oxymoron, derived from the Greek
oxus "sharp-witted" and
moros, "stupid." From
moros, of course, we also get
moron as well as
sophomore, another
oxymoron, sophos meaning "wisdom," so that sophomore literally means something like "wise idiot."
Coming November 31st, the RETURN OF THE STOOPID CONTEST
Published on November 15, 2011 03:23