Ebook: Haggard hawks and paltry poltroons: the origins of English in ten words
Author: Jones Paul Anthony
- Tags: English language--Etymology, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES--Linguistics--Etymology, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES--Linguistics--General, English language -- Etymology, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Linguistics -- Etymology, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Linguistics -- General
- Year: 2013
- Publisher: Little Brown Book Group
- City: London [England
- Language: English
- epub
Cover; Title; Copyright; Acknowledgements; Contents; Introduction; I Ten Words Derived from Places in Britain; II Ten Words Derived from Places in France; III Ten Words Derived from Places in Ancient Greece; IV Ten Words Derived from Places in Europe; V Ten Words Derived from Places in America; VI Ten British Words Not Used in American English; VII Ten Words Borrowed from Unusual Languages; VIII Ten Words Invented by Shakespeare; IX Ten Words Invented by Other Writers; X Ten Words Derived from 'Head'; XI Ten Words Derived from 'Heart'; XII Ten Words Derived from 'Hand';What do the following ten words all have in common - haggard, mews, codger, arouse, musket, poltroon, gorge, allure, pounce and turn-tail? All fairly familiar and straightforward words, after a little digging into their histories it turns out that all of them derive from falconry: the adjective haggard described an adult falcon captured from the wild; mews were the enclosures hawks were kept in whilst moulting; codger is thought to come from 'cadger', the member of a hunting party who carried the birds' perches, and so on. This, essentially, is what Ten Words is all about.
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