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Questions about the history and trends of the English language.

14 votes

Is the etymology of "salary" a myth?

In classical Latin, the word salarium already meant "salary": salarium proconsulari solitum offerri ... Agricolae non dedit: "the salary commonly offered a proconsul [the governor of a province or …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
14 votes

Were contractions less common in olden days?

[Edited] What is contraction? In all languages I know, there is a general tendency to contract existing words in speech. I will comment on contraction in writing later. The cause of contraction in …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
13 votes

What are the historical processes of preposition coining in English?

In Ancient Greek, it is assumed that most, if not all, prepositions were once adverbs. That is why most prepositions can still be used as adverbs starting a sentence in Ancient Greek, as in "upon [tha …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
12 votes
Accepted

A ligature "og"

That is indeed a ligature and so called in palaeography. It is completely normal in many Mediaeval and Early-Modern scripts. The ligature æ is of the same type. From the Wikipedia article on ligature: …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
8 votes
Accepted

Origin of term "doublespeak"

The Oxford English Dictionary doesn't have doublespeak as a separate entry; I can only make an educated guess. The word double-talk already existed in 1938, according to the OED, and was originally Am …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
7 votes
Accepted

What do references like "Docc Rom." and similar mean?

In 1933, Vicenzo Spampanato published many documents on the life of Bruno under the title Documenti della vita di Giordano Bruno. He divided these documents into the Documenti Veneti and the Document …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
6 votes
Accepted

Good and bad - suppletive adjectives

As far as I know, irregularity correlates to frequency of use: as a paradigm ( / set of related words) is more commonly used, it will be less regular on average. Suppletion is an (extreme) type of irr …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
4 votes
Accepted

nebula and nebulous - a question of origin

These words come from Latin nebula. Both nebula and nebulosus ("nebulous") existed in classical Latin. In the Middle Ages, anyone who could write was likely to know Latin. That is why writers freely …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
3 votes

Why is a woman's purse called a "pocketbook"?

All I know is this, which is not very much: 1610s, originally a small book meant to be carried in one’s pocket, from pocket + book. Meaning “a booklike leather folder for papers, bills, etc. …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar
2 votes
Accepted

"As if" & "As would be the case if"; Also, "As though"

In the history of the language, it has come to be treated as if it were, and its use and meaning seem to have adapted to this hypothesis, regardless of whether it is true. …
Cerberus - Reinstate Monica's user avatar