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English language trivia

Fun Facts About English #88 – Autology

12/26/2020 by admin

autological Kinney Brothers Publishing

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, “autological” is from the rare 17th-century noun “autology,” meaning “self-knowledge or the study of oneself.” In the 20th century, we use it to describe a word having or representing the property it denotes, e.g., “noun” is a noun, “English” is English, and “pentasyllabic” has five syllables.

The dictionary’s earliest recorded use of “autological” is from a paper by F. P. Ramsey published in 1926 in Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society:

F.P. Ramsey Kinney Brothers Publishing

Since adjectives describe things, including words, most autological words are adjectives. Nouns and verbs can also be self-descriptive, such as “abbrv.” and “read” when read. Phrases can be autological as well, e.g., “three words long” is three words long.

A word’s status as autological can change over time. “Neologism” means “a newly coined word or expression” and is no longer autological as it was attested in 1772. “Olde,” on the other hand, will continue to be autological for the rest of time.

The opposite of autological, as Mr. Ramsey stated above, is heterological – a word that doesn’t express a property of itself, e.g., monosyllabic, yellow, or square.

Here is an entertaining short-list of autological words:

  • polysyllabic
  • CAPITALIZED
  • portmanteau
  • unhyphenated
  • prefix
  • real
  • visible
  • fifteen-lettered
  • numberless
  • typed
  • black
  • bold
  • link
  • is
  • readable
  • noun phrase
  • end

Finally, to confuse matters a bit, what’s known as the Grelling–Nelson paradox, emerged from the definitions of autological and heterological.

The question:

“Is non-self-descriptive non-self-descriptive or self-descriptive?”

The paradox:

If it is self-descriptive, then non-self-descriptive is non-self-descriptive. But if non-self-descriptive is non-self-descriptive, then it does describe itself, so it must be self-descriptive.

If you enjoyed this post, you might check out these posts about contronyms, acronyms, eponyms, and capitonyms!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Check out all the Tic-Tac-Toe games in Donald’s English Classroom! When it comes to vocabulary-building activities, board games and puzzles are excellent for introduction, review, or just fun!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: autological words, English language trivia, F.P. Ramsey, Grelling-Nelson paradox, heterological, kinney brothers publishing, language properties, linguistic paradox, Oxford English Dictionary, self-descriptive words, self-knowledge, word properties

Fun Facts About English #37 – Words That End in -gry

12/27/2019 by admin

Though hangry was included in the OED (Oxford English Dictionary) in the 1990s, only time will tell how long this relatively recent (1918) portmanteau will be with us. Surprising as it is that so few words end in -gry, equally interesting are some of the uncommon, archaic, and obsolete -gry words that have fallen out of use.

Going back to Old and Middle English, archaic variations and compounds using the words hungry and angry were numerous! Consider such colorful expressions as anhungry, unhungry, dog-hungry, meat-hungry, wind-hungry, ever-angry, fire-angry, half-angry, heat-angry, self-angry, and tear-angry.

As for uncommon words, let’s start with gry itself. This extremely rare word is defined as 1/10 of a line and was marked as obsolete in the 1934 Second New International Dictionary.

Other uncommon words include aggry, (a variegated glass bead found in Ghana and England), and meagry (a variation on the word meager). Foreign vocables turned into English-appearing words include the Hindi word puggry (a cloth wrapped around a sun helmet), or the Egyptian word iggry (a word that translates as, ‘Hurry up!’)

In researching this Fun Fact, I unwittingly smacked into a popular -gry riddle — just the kind to leave you feeling half-angry when you’re forced to say, “I giveth up.” You’ll find the answer at the end of this post. Good luck.

Riddle
Think of three words ending in -gry. Angry and hungry are two of them. There are only three words in the English language. What is the third word? The word is something that everyone uses every day. If you have listened carefully, I have already told you what it is. (Hint: the answer is NOT hangry.)

If you found this interesting to read, you might enjoy learning about the rules of stacked adjectives, why the word we is so unique among languages, or the history of counters like, “A murder of crows”!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

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Answer
With the question about -gry words being a kind of smokescreen, the rest of the riddle is interpreted to mean “What is the third word in the three-word phrase the English language?” The answer is “language” — something we use every day. Ugh, right!?

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: -gry riddle, aggry beads, archaic English words, Donald's English Classroom, English language trivia, English vocabulary, hangry, kinney brothers publishing, language evolution, linguistic history, meta keywords: -gry words, obsolete words, Oxford English Dictionary, portmanteau, puggry cloth, uncommon words

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