Tag: Indo-European
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Terabyte: a “monstrous” amount of data
Last week, the Panama Papers leaked 2.6 terabytes of data. That adds ups to 11.5 million confidential documents about the secret, and potentially scandalous, offshoring of wealth across the globe. That’s a lot of information. You might even call it a “monstrous” amount, if you look to the origin of the prefix tera–. Monsters and marvels …
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Acquaintance
Should old acquaintance be forgot, as we sing in the New Year with Robert Burns’ “Auld Lang Syne.” While we may be well-acquainted with this tradition, the etymology of the word acquaintance may be much less well-known, shall we say. Acquaintance English gets acquainted with acquaintance from French sometime around the 1300s, at least as the written record is concerned. Deriving from…
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Laces and lashes: the origin of “scourge”
In the wake of the Paris attacks, world leaders have been condemning the scourge of terrorism. It is a powerful and forceful word, one we reserve for the most extraordinary of calamities and afflictions. But it might just have a very ordinary origin. Let’s have a look at the etymology of scourge. Scourge Scourge has been lashing the English language since the early 1200s. Back…
