Mashed Radish

Mashed Radish

Etymology at the intersection of news, life, and everyday language.

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  • dread

    We need to talk about dinosaurs. There’s been a lot of big compound nouns in the news lately: ceasefires, outbreaks, airstrikes. But none has been bigger than the Dreadnoughtus: 85-feet long, 30-feet tall, and an I’m-still-growing 130,000 pounds, this newly discovered dinosaur is believed to be among the largest land animals to have ever lived (New York Read more.

    John Kelly
    September 12, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • punctuation, part i

    Recently, I reviewed the delightful Punctuation..? by User design. Since school is back in session, I thought a review of punctuation marks–that is, the origins of their curious names–may prove timely and instructive. Many of the names for our punctuation marks exhibit a common trend we see here on the Mashed Radish, especially for scholarly or technical words Read more.

    John Kelly
    September 8, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • school

    For most students across the states, school is back in session this week–if the luxurious leisure of summer has not already ceded to new seat assignments or syllabuses. (Yes, syllabuses: I think the perfectly functional English plural is just fine.) Many teachers, however, may take a lesson from the etymology of school. School With widespread cognates, the word comes down Read more.

    John Kelly
    September 4, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • Bongo Bongo

    If you’re a fan of the Mashed Radish, you’ll definitely want to fire up some episodes of Bongo Bongo. Magnet Media brought to my attention Bongo Bongo, a weekly web series from PBS Digital Studios whose host and writer,  Ethan Fixell explores “the etymology and cultural impact of popular words we use.” (You had me at PBS.) It airs every Tuesday, Read more.

    John Kelly
    August 29, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • loot

    Some etymologies drive the point home perfectly–and others have a way of bringing it all together. Such is the case with the word loot, which has surfaced–and I think in an insidiously racialized manner–amid the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri. Its origin, however, is far, far away from the American Midwest. Loot Loot derives from the Hindi lut, meaning “spoil,” Read more.

    John Kelly
    August 26, 2014
    Uncategorized

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