Homonyms #2
Thanks,
Christine, for suggesting some homonyms in your comments to last week’s post.
We’ll start off with a homonym that takes its multiple-meaning status seriously.
Almost
all forms of dessert/desert came to English through French. Dessert
came to English in the 1500s in reference to the last course of a meal. The
French word it came from is deservir, which (because serving the
last course involved clearing the table of the previous courses) translates
literally to un-serve, with des- meaning undo & servir
meaning to serve. The wasteland meaning of desert
came to English in the 1200s from Old French, which came from the Late Latin
word desertum,
which meant thing abandoned. It
wasn’t until the 1700s that the meaning a
waterless, treeless region eclipsed
the wasteland meaning. The
desert
which means suitable reward or punishment
(as in getting one’s just deserts) came through French
from the Latin word deservir (not to be confused with the French word deservir).
It meant to serve well. I suppose one
is served well by getting what one
deserves. But so much for nouns – the verb desert came through the Old French deserter
in the 1300s from the Latin desertare (closely related to
desertum), which meant to abandon.
This particular desert is built of the word parts de-, meaning opposite or undo, & serere,
meaning to put in a row. Serere
also gave birth to the word series.
Christine’s
comment also included the near-homonym pairs form/from & definitely/defiantly. In my humble opinion, the from
& form confusion is a matter of typing more than a homonym issue.
We just get typing away & muck it up. The confusion between definitely
& defiantly, however, is another matter altogether. I’ve been
grading English papers since the 1970s, & in my experience, these two words
were never confused before computers. The confusion didn’t even exist with the
first raft of word processors. I call this phenomenon a spellcheck-induced error.
It occurs because many of us type definAtely instead of definItely.
Our spell-checker “reads” our intentions & comes up with defiantly
(which contributes to some hysterical sentences).
We’ll
finish this post with a homonym trio I find intriguing: by, bye & buy.
By has been around since Old English was born & came from a
Proto-Germanic word meaning about, near,
or around. Though we pronounce it differently today, we find by’s sister (with the same meaning) at the
end of place names that end in –by.
In Yorkshire alone there are over 210 place names ending this way (Wetherby
& Selby, for instance). Our modern word buy, came from another
Proto-Germanic source, the word bugjan, meaning to pay for. When it first entered English, the soft g sound
remained at the end of the word, & is one of the reasons the past tense, bought
includes the letter g. The completely unrelated word bye is a shortening of good-bye,
which in the 1570s was spelled godbwye and was interestingly a
shortening of something else -- the term
God be with ye.
Thanks
for joining me for another Wordmonger post. Please leave any comments on all
this in the comments section. And please check out the orange KEBF note to the right.
Word processors! Now I understand how people mix those words up; the connection between "definitely" and "defiantly" was never apparent to me!
ReplyDeleteBugjan. Huh. I find your homonym trio equally intriguing.
Hey Rachel6,
DeleteWhen defiantly started showing up all over my kids' papes I was truly puzzled, but spell-check is clearly the culprit. My techie pals tell me the newer generation of spell-check won't be making this mistake. I'm certain it will find other mistakes to create. Bugjian, indeed!
Yes, the from and form dilemma is most assuredly a typing muck up for me. I do a "find and replace" now and then to take care of it. The most intriguing of these homonyms for me is desert, dessert. Sometimes a noun, sometimes a verb. Use it this way pronounce it that way, use it that way pronounce it this way. The etymology of it all is pretty fascinating. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteAnd big thanks to you for giving me fine fodder for this post.
DeleteI'm the queen of disordering words while typing. I've lived in Califronia for 40 years and I still spell it that way half the time. Sometimes my name is Anen Allne
ReplyDeleteI love the -by suffix for English place names. When I wanted a fictional name for Gainsborough Lincolnshire, where my novel Sherwood Ltd is set, I called it Swynsby--because the Viking warlord Sweyn Forkbeard founded the town, and adding -by means "around Sweyn's place" in other words, Sweyn's town.
Howdy Anne,
ReplyDeleteAnd a truly enjoyable novel it is!
Thanks for popping by.