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Jeff Aronson’s Words

Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Adam’s navel

October 2, 2015

Zeus one day, having nothing better to do, released two eagles from the easternmost and westernmost edges of the world. Flying at the same speed, they met over Delphi, where […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Adam’s apple

September 25, 2015

The Hebrew name of the first man, Adam (אדם), was also used to mean “man” itself, although the more usual word is “ish” (איש). The origin of the name is unknown, […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Adam’s throat-bowl

September 18, 2015

Of the dozen early medical words I found in the Old English dictionary called the Epinal glossary, five were anatomical: átr (atter, gall, or bitterness; Latin Bile); bledrae (bladder; Latin […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Gargantuan gargoyles

September 11, 2015

Although I found only one onomatopoeic word (iesca, a sob, hiccup, or belch), among early medical words in the Old English dictionary called the Epinal glossary, another, throtbolla (throat-boll, the […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Medical onomatopoeia

September 4, 2015

Seeking early medical words in the Old English dictionary known as the Epinal glossary, I was not surprised to find that one of the dozen examples I unearthed was onomatopoeic: […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . The first medical word

August 28, 2015

In an earlier blog I noted the impossibility of knowing which words came first, language having evolved thousands of years before written records, although claims have been made for the […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Ars magna

August 21, 2015

In 1545 Girolamo Cardano, an Italian physician, mathematician, and philosopher, published a book, Ars magna, or the Rules of Algebra (picture), which included the solutions to cubic and quartic equations, […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Backronyms

August 14, 2015

A backronym is not an acronym written backwards but one that is formed retrospectively. The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) gives two definitions: 1. An acronym formed from a phrase whose […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Get shorty

August 7, 2015

Abbreviation of a word or phrase to a letter or two is the most extreme form of breakage that it can undergo. The process has variants: initialisms, contractions, and acronyms. […]

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Jeffrey Aronson: When I Use a Word … Backslang

July 31, 2015

Back-formation , forming words by shortening other words, should not be confused with backslang, the formation of words, not by breaking them up, but simply by reversing them. A yob […]

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