About

Mashed Radish is John Kelly’s effort to get to the bottom of words that are on the top of our minds.

In each post, he uncovers the etymology of a notable word in the present—whether from news, culture, work, everyday life, or sometimes just out of sheer delight or curiosity—to discover new insights or fresh perspectives from its past. With a little whimsy, and a lot of word facts, along the way.

Because every word has a prize inside. Since 2013.



John Kelly

I have always had this way I can’t help but see the world—and that’s by wondering why we call things what we do.

By wondering why words, whether fancy like pulchritudinous or functional like by, have taken the shape that they have. By marveling that we have all these words, that we have this thing called language, in the first place.

And so began a lifelong fascination with etymology.

After having lived and traveled all around, I have resettled in my hometown, Cincinnati, Ohio, with my wife Olivia, our dog Hugo, and bottomless cups of decaf.

I previously worked as Vice President at Dictionary.com, have appeared across online media, radio, and TV as an expert on words, and have regularly published in such outlets as Slate, Atlas Obscura, Mental Floss, Oxford Dictionaries, Emojipedia, and more.

Prior to my work in words, I served as an educator in various roles, focusing on underserved populations, especially students with disabilities and from low-income backgrounds. 

In 2016, I read the complete works of Shakespeare and wrote about the experience on my other site, Shakespeare Confidential.

Contact

Follow me as @mashedradish.bsky.social on Bluesky. Connect me with on LinkedIn. Email me at mashedradish@gmail.com.



What is etymology?

Etymology is the study of where words come from and how their form and meaning change over time.

What is the etymology of the word etymology?

Recorded in English since the late 1400s, etymology ultimately derives from a Greek word whose roots are etymos, “true, real,” and logos, “word, reason.”

So, etymology is, literally, “the study of the true meanings of words.” But this is where we need to be careful of what’s called the etymological fallacy.

The etymological fallacy argues that the “true meaning”—read, “correct meaning”—of a word is its original meaning.

Language evolves. The form and meaning of words, due to a range of factors, evolve. That’s what true and real. Etymology is just where words started and where they have gone over time.

A blog about etymology deserves a good origin all of its own.

Etymology involves breaking down words into their roots. The word for “root” in Latin, to which English owes a great deal of its lexicon, is radix, source of such words as radical—and radish. And “breaking down” a word is a bit like mashing it up, no? Voilà. Mashed Radish.

What is the “m ʃ r ʃ” at the end of posts?

The “m ʃ r ʃ” you find at the end of many posts is an idiosyncratic sign-off that plays on the pronunciation of Mashed Radish.

The long s character you see is called esh, and in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) it represents the sh sound used in Mashed. Radish. In linguistics, that sh sound is officially known as a voiceless palatal fricative.

The esh symbol closely resembles the integral symbol used in calculus—and I like to think that etymologies have a way of bringing together, or integrating, a lot of different, often unrelated things.

As a garnish, when I was young, I had for a little time a speech impediment, struggling to pronounce that very sh and related sounds. Mashed Radish, in name and representation, is a lighthearted allusion to this personal past.

Where do the drawings in each post come from?

Each post, I try my own hand sketching up a quick doodle that corresponds to the etymological topics at hand. If you come across any older posts where the drawings actually look good, those are likely by my brother, Andrew Kelly.


Selected Bibliography

My bookshelf, print and digital, is always growing. Right now, I am primarily indebted to the following sources. They are incredible go-tos, springboards, cross references, and rabbit holes:

  • Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology (Ed. C.T. Onions)
  • Oxford English Dictionary
  • Online Etymology Dictionary (Ed. Douglas Harper)
  • Walter W. Skeat’s An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language
  • Ernest Weekely’s An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English
  • Joseph E. Shipley’s The Origin of English Words
  • Ibid., Dictionary of Word Origins
  • Eric Partridge’s A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English
  • Anatoly Liberman’s An Analytical Dictionary of English Etymology
  • Ernest Klein’s A Comprehensive Dictionary of the English Language
  • Emmauele Baumgartner and Philippe Menard’s Dictionnaire Étymologique
  • John C. Traupman’s The New College Latin & English Dictionary
  • Liddell & Scott’s An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon


52 responses to “About”

  1. stewartkris23 Avatar

    I’m delighted your blog exists. In undergrad I studied Linguistics. My favorite course was on the history of the English language in general and specific etymologies, with an ultra passionate professor. I’m happy I can read your writing/research/wit to fill in what I’ve missing in the years since that class.

    1. Wow, what a compliment! Thanks, and thanks for your readership. Let me know if there’s ever a word you are curious for me to look into.

  2. Hello! I just found your blog and am very excited to explore it. I’m a new college student majoring in Linguistics, so I’m fascinated by your blog. Thank you for enlightening us and I look forward to reading what you’ve got to say as I progress through my college years.

  3. Words are the footprints of mankind. Intrigued by your blog. Off to wander around here a bit.

  4. maybe you can help me with your skills to incorporate the significance of the created words i have in my language theorems. if you want to do this, then head on over to my blog post.

  5. I’m fascinated by words and their origins and etymology. This is an incredible blog, and one of the few that I actively try to read regularly.

  6. […] Gott join forces at Peak Perspective; John Kelly showcases his brother Andrew’s sketches at Mashed Radish. Themed submissions: Diahann Reyes at Stories From the Belly invited two of her favorite bloggers […]

  7. … had kind of a weird experience driving to work… let’s say over two months or so ago now. For some reason the experience has gotten stuck in my head and has become a casual obsession. If an obsession can be… casual.

    I saw an advertisement on a truck or van that morning. Still not quite together- I am not a ‘morning’ person- I had noticed the word “stampede” and another word before that and trying to make out that other word I deduced it was “traherne”.

    Now the word was indeed not “traherne”; I strained a bit more and realized the word was something utterly different but that experience of seeing “traherne” seemed, in this instance, strange to me. A different thing than the usual perception gone slightly awry. It even seemed strangely almost a communication… Now of course I know that makes little sense.

    So I had this peculiar combination of words “traherne stampede”. Now I have, embarrassing to say, attacked this from several directions trying to squeeze a sort of meaning out of it. Of course the first thing I did was google it… that was interesting.

    I found a video on YouTube of a passage from Thomas Traherne set to a sort of atmospheric music that seemed to be the result of a musical group- very local and unheard of- by the name of Stampede. Now there is another group called Stampede that has a site on the internet but this is a different group. Definitely kind of strange to even find that. And I also found a book by what seems may be one of his relations, from a later time, that is after the word ‘stampede’ was born and actually uses that word…

    I ended up downloading Traherne’s “Centuries” to my phone- he is vaguely reminiscent of Blake & Wordsworth. Definitely his own style… quite different and interesting from either Blake etc. And I thought he might have a passage employing the word “stampede” but gradually learned that “stampede” has a much later vintage than the 17th century… well he would not have used that word. It didn’t exist. Unless he had created a neologism… but seems not.

    Now I have also tried to decipher the roots of these words- their etymologies. Traherne has a meaning “very much like iron”… But your post about stampede was not what I expected. Very personal… yet informative. It seems like a pretty recent addition… just from last month!

    The meaning of stampede is “crash, bang, uproar” so putting these meanings together “traherne stampede” = “a crash of iron”. Now this begins to sound musical… a gong. Or as iron is associated with Mars alchemically we could even get “war of the worlds’ out of it… an uproar or crash courtesy of Mars. Still I think it is time to put my casual obsession to rest… don’t you? Thanks for the post!

  8. Long live the cunning linguist!

  9. Interesting blog to follow!

  10. Puerto Rico…one of my recent fav’s…

Leave a reply to Michelle Smith Cancel reply