Mashed Radish

Mashed Radish

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

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  • comedy & tragedy

    Comedy & Tragedy According to Mallory and Adams in The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World, there are 24 distinct verbs concerned with speaking in Proto-Indo-European. But if headlines these past weeks have been any measure, we all feel a bit speechless in our great many daughter Indo-European languages. One such root for speech is *wed-, which Read more.

    John Kelly
    August 13, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • vaccine

    Vaccine For every deadly virus, we hope there is a vaccine. The word, it turns out, milks a very old root. In 1796, British scientist Edward Jenner is credited with inventing the first vaccine by inoculating patients with cowpox in order to protect against smallpox. That’s the nice way of putting it. The story is Read more.

    John Kelly
    August 9, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • virus

    For so many of us, a virus might spell the end of our computer–not our lives, as we are witnessing so tragically in the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. Sometimes a viral video is precisely what is needed to distract us from today’s feverish crises. Too often, though, a viral video may be distracting us from them. But Read more.

    John Kelly
    August 5, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • tomato, tomatl

    If it weren’t for Nahuatl, what would we be eating? As we saw in a recent post on amnesty and coyote, the latter word originates in Nahuatl. Still spoken by about 1.5 million people and a member of the extensive Uto-Aztecan language family native to the Southwest US and Mexico, Nahuatl actually comprises a large variety of dialects. The one Read more.

    John Kelly
    July 29, 2014
    Uncategorized

  • rockets & missiles

    Rockets and missiles have been too much with us.  Where do the words come from? Rocket Originally referring to “fireworks,” rocket derives from the Italian rocchetto–passing into English from the French roquette in the early 1600s–where it referred to something far gentler and more productive: a “bobbin,” a spool around which yarn is wound. The word is Read more.

    John Kelly
    July 22, 2014
    Uncategorized

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