scruta

Either you are sorting it out, or you are full of it.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

New Words: Inchoate and Vitrine

Inchoate

Vitrine

posted by ferret at 2:09 am  

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Swingin’ Chinese

I recently learned the word for “swing” (i.e. the one you find in a playground) in modern, simplified Chinese:

秋千, qiūqiān

The word baffled me since 秋 (qiÅ«) means “fall” or “autumn”, and 千 (qiān) means “one thousand”. I thought: What the hell kind of etymology does that entail? Do Chinese people look at swings this poetically? Like sitting on a swing is like becoming a lone leaf capable of experiencing the exhilaration of a thousand falls in autumn? For anyone out there who might have mistakenly tattooed this on his or her body for this or some other very romantic reason, I’m sorry to disappoint you. It just looks like the usual mischief we find in the difference between simplified Chinese and traditional Chinese.

The traditional characters for “swing” look like this:

鞦韆 (still pronounced, qiūqiān)

Notice the conspicuous use of radical 革 (gé) for leather in each character, as the 遷 (simplified: 迁, qiān, “move”) in the second character. Now the characters relate more clearly to what a swing actually is: a moving piece of cloth, leather hung from a tree or high pole.

You can get the whole story in all of it’s geeked out detail (including images from ancient seals and oracle bones!) at Chinese Etymology.

posted by ferret at 11:50 pm  

Saturday, January 16, 2010

New Words: Internecine and Baleful

Internecine

Baleful

posted by ferret at 3:05 pm  

Monday, January 11, 2010

New Words: Stentorian and Manque

Stentorian

Manque

posted by ferret at 3:53 pm  

Sunday, December 27, 2009

New Words: Bildungsroman and Clanjamfry

Bildungsroman

Clanjamfry

posted by ferret at 7:59 am  

Saturday, December 12, 2009

New Words: Swale and Shirring

Swale

Shirring

posted by ferret at 5:41 pm  

Thursday, December 10, 2009

New Words: Amanuensis and Obbligato

Amanuensis

Obbligato

posted by ferret at 11:26 am  

Sunday, November 29, 2009

New Words: Flivver and Emmetropia

Flivver

Emmetropia

posted by ferret at 7:43 pm  

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

New Words: Stanchion and Gentian

Stanchion

Gentian

posted by ferret at 6:15 pm  

Friday, October 30, 2009

New Words: Floccinaucinihilipilification and Infundibuliform

Floccinaucinihilipilification

Infundibuliform

(Ah, Latin, how I miss you so…)

posted by ferret at 12:30 am  
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