The etymologicon A circular stroll through the hidden connections of the English language

Mark Forsyth

Book - 2012

Unauthorized guide to the underpinnings of the English language.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Berkley Books 2012, c2011.
Language
English
Main Author
Mark Forsyth (-)
Edition
Berkley trade pbk. ed
Physical Description
xvii, 279 p. ; 20 cm
ISBN
9780425260791
  • Preface
  • A Turn-up for the Books
  • A Game of Chicken
  • Hydrogentlemanly
  • The Old and New Testicle
  • Parenthetical Codpieces
  • Suffering for my Underwear
  • Pans
  • Miltonic Meanders
  • Bloody Typical Semantic Shifts
  • The Proof of the Pudding
  • Susage Poison in your Face
  • Bows and Arrows and Cats
  • Black and White
  • Hat Cheque Point Charlie
  • Sex and Bread
  • Concealed Farts
  • Wool
  • Turkey
  • Insulting Foods
  • Folk Etymology
  • Butterflies of the World
  • Psychoanalysis and the Release of the Butterfly
  • The Villains of the Language
  • Two Executioners and a Doctor
  • Thomas Crapper
  • Mythical Acronyms
  • John the Baptist and the Sound of Music
  • Organic, Organised, Organs
  • Clipping
  • Buffalo
  • Antanaclasis
  • China
  • Coincidences and Patterns
  • Frankly, My Dear Frankfurter
  • Beastly Foreigners
  • Pejoratives
  • Ciao, Slave Driver
  • Robots
  • Terminators and Prejudice
  • Terminators and Equators
  • Equality in Ecuador
  • Bogeys
  • Bugbears and Bedbugs
  • Von Munchausen's Computer
  • SPAM (not spam)
  • Heroin
  • Morphing De Quincey and Shelley
  • Star-Spangled Drinking Songs
  • Torpedoes and Turtles
  • From Mount Vernon to Portobello Road with a Hangover
  • A Punch of Drinks
  • The Scampering Champion of the Champagne Campaign
  • Insulting Names
  • Peter Pan
  • Herbaceous Communication
  • Papa was a Saxum Volutum
  • Flying Peters
  • Venezuela and Venus and Venice
  • What News on the Rialto?
  • Magazines
  • Dick Snary
  • Autopeotomy
  • Water Closets for Russia
  • Fat Gunhilda
  • Queen Gunhilda and the Gadgets
  • Shell
  • In a Nutshell
  • The Iliad
  • The Human Body
  • The Five Fingers
  • Hoax Bodies
  • Bunking and Debunking
  • The Anglo-Saxon Mystery
  • The Sedge-Strewn Stream and Globalisation
  • Coffee
  • Cappuccino Monks
  • Called to the Bar
  • Ignorami
  • Fossil-less
  • The Frequentative Suffix
  • Pending
  • Worms and their Turnings
  • Mathematics
  • Stellafied and Oily Beavers
  • Beards
  • Islands
  • Sandwich Islands
  • The French Revolution in English Words
  • Romance Languages
  • Peripatetic Peoples
  • From Bohemia to California (via Primrose Hill)
  • California
  • The Hash Guys
  • Drugs
  • Pleasing Pslams
  • Biblical Errors
  • Salt
  • Halcyon Days
  • Dog Days
  • Cynical Dogs
  • Greek Education and Fastchild
  • Cybermen
  • Turning Trix
  • Amateur-Lovers
  • Dirty Money
  • Death Pledges
  • Wagering War
  • Strapped for Cash
  • Fast Bucks and Dead Ones
  • The Buck Steps here
  • Back to Howth Castle and Environs
  • Quizzes
  • The Cream of the Sources
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Inky Fool blogger Forsyth debuts with a breezy, amusing stroll through the uncommon histories of some common English words. The British author settled on a clever device to arrange his material--the end of each entry provides a link to the beginning of the next. Forsyth is interested (obsessed?) with words--how they began and how they've journeyed to where they now are. He shows us the connection between sausage and Botox, how an expression like point-blank wandered into everyday usage from archery, that poppycock has a scatological history, that Thomas Crapper manufactured a popular brand of toilet, and how Thomas Edison was the first to use bug as a term for something causing a device to malfunction. Although he uses an informal, even snarky, Internet-appropriate style ("Protestants and Catholics got into an awful spat," he writes of the Reformation), Forsyth carries more weight than his style sometimes suggests. He alludes periodically to Homer, Shakespeare and other literary heavyweights. He knows his history and geography; the style may be lighter-than-air, but the cargo is substantial. Some other goodies: The telephone popularized the word hello; Shell Oil was once in the seashell business; the Romans were the first to raise in derision the middle finger; bunk came from Buncombe, N.C.; Starbucks can be traced not just to Moby-Dick but to the Vikings' word for a Yorkshire stream. Occasionally, the author missteps. He says that Noah Webster was "an immensely boring man," a conclusion not supported by Joshua Kendall's gracefully told The Forgotten Founding Father (2011). Snack-food style blends with health-food substance for a most satisfying meal.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.