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Fun Facts About English #97 – Universal Language

02/21/2021 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing pizza Fun Facts About English

Words like taxi, tea, bikini, OK, and pizza are a type of “universal” language due to their highly frequent borrowings among populations around the planet. Such widespread adoption is the result of cultural contact, colonialism, war, trade, and popular media. The global spread began happening centuries ago. Below are four “universal” words and the histories of their intrepid march around the globe.

Pizza

pizza

This culture-specific word is written and pronounced in a variety of ways around the world: bǐsà-bǐng, biitza, pitstsa, pizā and pijā.

The precursor of modern pizza was likely focaccia, a flatbread known to the Romans as panis focacius. The word pizza was first documented in A.D. 997 in Gaeta and successively in different parts of Central and Southern Italy. The introduction of a savory tomato sauce came centuries later after the red fruit from the Americas was introduced.

In 16th-century Naples, the flatbread pizza was known as a dish for poor people and was sold as street food and in pizzerias. Over the next two centuries, the dish gained popularity and became a tourist attraction as visitors ventured into the poorer areas of Naples to visit the pizzerias and sample the local specialties.

Pizza made its appearance in the United States with the arrival of Italian immigrants in the late 19th century. Italian-American pizzerias flourished in New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Trenton, and St. Louis. Following World War II, returning veterans who were introduced to Italy’s native cuisine abroad flocked to the American restaurants and entrepreneurs eyed the market for expansion.

By the 1960s, pizza consumption exploded in the U.S. Parallel to their fast-food brethren, pizza chains created a wildly popular dining market that included Shakey’s Pizza (1954), Pizza Hut (1958), and Little Ceasars (1959). Chilled and frozen pizzas sold in supermarkets made pizza readily available nationwide.

In the latter part of the 20th century, American pizza chains expanded into world markets. The recipes were adopted and adapted to local tastes with preferred toppings. Pizza Hut®, for example, has 18,703 restaurants around the globe. In Japan, eel and squid are popular toppings, Pakistanis love their curry pizza, and Norwegians eat the most pizza in the world! Once the provenance of the Italian poor, pizza has become one of the most recognized and popular dishes worldwide.

Coffee

This word is recognized in more than eight widely-spoken languages. Though its discovery is the fodder of various legends, coffee originated in the Arabic qahwah. There is evidence of coffee drinking from the early 15th century in the Sufi monasteries of Yemen (kingdom of Sheba) and spread to Mecca and Medina. By the 16th century, it reached the rest of the Middle East, South India, Persia, Turkey, India, and northern Africa. Coffee then spread to the Balkans, Italy, the rest of Europe, and Southeast Asia.

The Beat Belt

The word “coffee” entered the English language in 1582 via the Dutch koffie. The French pronounce the word café, Germans say kaffee, in Italian it’s caffè, and in Japanese, コーヒー (kōhī). From iced coffee in Portugal to the spiced coffee of Morocco, each culture has adapted the drink to their own distinctive cultural tastes. Major American chains such as Starbucks can be found in 76 countries around the globe.

Metro

The UK’s London Underground opened in 1863 with locomotive trains. In 1890, it became the world’s first urban railway “system” when electric trains began operating on its deep-level tube lines. In France, the Paris Métro opened in 1900. It was one of the first to use the term “metro,” an abbreviation from its original operating company’s name, “Compagnie du chemin de fer métropolitain de Paris.

This is a digitized and colorized film of Germany’s Wuppertal Schwebebahn shot in 1902. Where the train itself appears so recognizably “modern,” the background is shockingly old world!

Today, “metro” has the same meaning and almost the same pronunciation in Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Finnish, Basque, French, English, and Hungarian. There are more than 178 transportation systems globally with an average of 168 million daily passengers. From subway to above-ground railways, metro systems have become a ubiquitous part of the urban landscape worldwide.

Shampoo

Shampoo

The word shampoo entered the English language from the Indian subcontinent during the colonial era. It is dated to 1762 and was derived from Hindi chāmpo, from the Sanskrit root chapati, meaning “to press, knead, or soothe.”

The people of India would historically boil saponin-rich soapberries with a mixture of herbs and fruits, then strain it for an effective, lathery soap. This product would clean hair and was part of a massage and bathing routine known as chāmpo.

When early colonial traders in India returned to Europe, they introduced these newly-acquired bathing habits and the hair treatment they called “shampoo.” The first “champooi,” or Indian health spa and massage, was opened in England in 1814 by Sake Dean Mahomed, an Indian traveler, surgeon, and entrepreneur. Mr. Mahomed was also appointed as shampooing surgeon to both King George IV and William IV.

During the early stages of its adoption in Europe, hair stylists boiled shaved soap in water and added herbs to create a shampoo treatment that gave the hair shine and fragrance. Commercially-made shampoo wasn’t available until the turn of the 20th century when companies like Canthrox and Rexall offered shampoo products at local druggists. In 1927, liquid shampoo was created by German inventor Hans Schwarzkopf in Berlin. The first shampoo using synthetic surfactants instead of soap was Proctor & Gamble’s Drene brand in the 1930s.

Today, shampoo is an 85-billion dollar health and beauty market crossing every continent and nearly every nation on the planet. The word “shampoo” is also found in most major languages including French, Albanian, Corsican, Danish, Dutch, Finish, German, Italian, and Japanese. In Spanish, it’s champu, and in Korean, syampu.

I’ll finish this post with one more world map.

Netflix

If you enjoyed this post, you might also be interested in what makes a word autological, the everyday language of anatomy, or why we use the word dumbbells!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

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Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: borrowing, coffee, culture, etymology, global spread, history, kinney brothers publishing, language, linguistic evolution, metro, pizza, shampoo, universal language, worldwide adoption

Fun Facts About English #76 – The Longest Isogram

10/23/2020 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing uncopyrightable

OK, word nerds, this post is for you!

An isogram, also known as a nonpattern word, is a word with no repeating letters or, more broadly, a word in which the letters occur an equal number of times. This category of words can be further subdivided into first, second and third orders, words with repeating pairs, words that can be transposed, words equally divided between the first and second half of the alphabet and… well, you get the picture.

In addition to being an isogram, the meaning of uncopyrightable is ambiguous. It could mean “able of being un-copyrighted” or “unable of being copyrighted.”

Because of the paucity of 15-letter non-pattern words, attempts have been made to add to their numbers by “coining” more of them. They include misconjugatedly, hydroneumatics, and prediscountably. Possible 16-letter words are uncopyrightables and subendolymphatic.

twelve-letter isograms Kinney Brothers Publishing

Isogrammatic Orders

First-order isograms, like uncopyrightable, are words where each letter appears only once. 14-letter isograms include ambidextrously, troublemaking, and demographics.

Second-order isograms, where each letter appears twice, are Vivienne, Caucasus, couscous, intestines, and deed.

Third-order isograms, where every letter appears three times, are deeded, sestettes (a spelling variant of sextets), and geggee (a victim of a hoax).

The longest first-order isogrammatic place name, at 14 letters, is Bricklehampton, a small village in Worcestershire, England.

eleven-letter isograms Kinney Brothers Publishing

If you’re interested in more word oddities and trivia, get your favorite beverage and check out this site by Jeff Miller (who also has a pretty mean collection of dictionaries!) Peruse this compendium of online resources for wordplay, puzzlers, making word clouds, and saving endangered words.https://kinneybrothers.com/blog/blog/2020/12/22/fun-facts-89-collective-nouns/

If you enjoyed this post, you might also like to know the word with the most consecutive vowels, what makes a word autological, or where collective nouns like, “A murder of crows” come from!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Trends: Business and Culture Reports, Books 1 & 2, bring you sixty topical Business Reports that will entertain, inform, and prompt your adult intermediate and advanced students toward lively discussions. Utilizing charts, graphs, puzzles, surveys, discussion activities, and more, these Business Reports invite students to explore and compare cultural, business, and language matters.

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: Donald's English Classroom, first-order isogram, isogram, kinney brothers publishing, language, linguistic patterns, nonpattern word, second-order isogram, third-order isogram, vocabulary, word nerds, word patterns

Fun Facts About English #66 – Folk Etymology & Gender Nouns

08/14/2020 by admin

According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, the word lord can be traced back to the Old English word hlāfweard meaning “loaf-ward” or “bread-keeper,” reflecting the Germanic tribal custom of a chieftain providing food for his followers. Likewise, lady is from the Old English word hlœfdīge and referred to the woman in charge of the household production of food, e.g., kneading of said bread.

As our culture moved into wholly agrarian-based urban societies, land holdings and titles came to denote wealth, authority, and nobility. As individuals rose in status, so did their titles, like Lord and Lady. Where wifman, meaning woman, is the word from which our lawful term wife is derived, so husband, meaning “tiller of the soil,” has come to refer to the legal male head of a household. Such language, revealing in its history, is constantly evolving.

Popular but Mistaken

There is a thing called “folk” or “popular” etymology where one overlays prejudices or preferences on language to justify contemporary ideas or concerns. For example, the “son” in person has no relationship to a male child. Likewise, the “his” in history, from the Greek word historia meaning “to seek knowledge,” has no etymological connection to a male-oriented view of past events, i.e., his story.* Old English hire or her, is the third person singular form of heo or she, with the absolute form being hers.

Another example of folk etymology is the misconception that the words womb and woman are related. Womb is from the Old English word wombe or wambe meaning “stomach” and, besides having no gender specificity, referred to either human or animal organs that sometimes included the intestines and the heart.

Gender Nouns

Next, let’s take a closer look at the nouns male, female, man, woman, and human.

Man or mann derives from Proto-Germanic and meant “person,” referring to both men and women. To be gender specific, wifman and werman were used for a female person and male person respectively. The “wer” in werman survives to this day in the word werewolf, meaning “man-wolf.”

Over time, wifman lost the ‘f’ and became first wimman, then wumman, and finally woman. After the Norman Conquest, the ‘wer’ disappeared from werman to become man, a gender-specific noun referring to males but still maintained the “mankind” inflection meaning “all humans.”

Surprisingly, the word world has its origins in a male-specific etymology. The Anglo-Saxon word werold means “age of man” derived from the compound wer (man) + ald (age). Its definition, on the other hand, is more closely related to a gender-neutral “human existence” or “affairs of life.”

Now, what about male and female? Both of these words came into the English language via Old French. Male is from the Latin masculus, meaning “male,” and was shortened to masle in Old French. Over time, the ‘s’ was dropped and the word became male. Female is derived from the Latin diminutive femina, became femelle in Old French, and finally female in English. In short, the “male” in female has no relationship to the word male meaning “dude.”

Finally, human comes from the Latin word humanus and the Latin root homo, meaning “human being.” It transformed into humaine in Old French and Middle English, and finally human and humane in Modern English. Once again, the word human has no etymological connection with the words male or man in a gender-specific sense.

You might also be interested in the peculiarity of the word widow, the explosion of acronyms in the past two centuries, or the fact that un-friend is actually quite old!

*The Herstory Archives is an archive of Lesbian history and literature founded in the 1970s. The use of “her” in the organization’s name, while clever, is not going to castrate the canons of history nor does it defile any linguistic integrities. Give the women their historical due and move on.

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

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If you’re not using task cards in class, you’re missing out on an excellent center or whole class activity that turns repetition into fun! Check out all the task cards available in Donald’s English Classroom!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: cultural shifts, Donald's English Classroom, etymology, folk etymology, gender, gender nouns, kinney brothers publishing, language, linguistic evolution, societal roles, word origins

Spelling Bees – A Brief History

07/26/2020 by admin

Though this post was intended to be exclusive to my weekly Fun Facts About English, I feel that, given the events happening in the United States in 2020, this bit of history is quite apropos and a story worth sharing more widely. As Americans, we are being called upon to acknowledge our racist past, join together in solidarity, and move forward with greater efforts to ensure equality and fairness for all Americans — including those seeking asylum on our shores.

Kinney Brothers Publishing Spelling Bees A Brief History

I hate to admit that, even given multiple tries, I probably wouldn’t be able to spell the two dinosaur names above. I sit in awe of people who spell well. I also know I’m not alone when it comes to my spelling disabilities.

The English language has had spelling issues for a very, very long time. In centuries past, there have been compilers and reformers who tried to catalogue and standardize the English language. From Richard Mulcaster’s The first Part of the Elementarie in 1582, Samuel Johnson’s comprehensive and highly influential dictionary of 1755, and Noah Webster’s 19th century American dictionary, we are making strides toward standardization, but the myriad exceptions force us to rely on rote learning and memory to be a good speller.

Blue-backed Speller Kinney Brothers Publishing

First published in 1786, Webster’s spelling books, known colloquially as “The Blue-backed Speller,” were an essential part of the elementary school curriculum in the United States for five generations. These spelling primers were the impetus for the earliest spelling contests; an activity to motivate students to learn standardized spelling. The first such spelling matches were recorded in 1808. From about 1850, local events were referred to as “spelling bees.”

The word bee has been used to describe a get-together or communal work, such as a husking bee, a quilting bee, or an apple bee. The word likely comes from a dialectal been or bean, meaning “help given by neighbors” from the Middle English word bene.

Spelling bees were usually held in individual schools and towns and weren’t yet nationally organized. In 1908, the National Education Association (NEA) held the “first national spelling bee” in Cleveland, Ohio as part of its 46th annual convention. The NEA Spelling Bee was a team-based competition held at the Hippodrome Theater where six thousand people attended, including convention speaker, Booker T. Washington.

NEA Spelling Bee Kinney Brothers Publishing

Even before the competition, some members of the all-White Louisiana team took offense at having to compete on the same stage with Ohio’s racially-integrated teams. Nonetheless, Marie Bolden, a thirteen-year-old Black girl from Cleveland, was named champion and awarded the gold medal. Marie’s victory made national news because it upset the day’s stereotypes about what Black children could or should be allowed to accomplish. Back in New Orleans, the local Black YMCA organized a spelling bee in honor of Miss Bolden’s victory, but the mayor, embarrassed by the upset in Cleveland, withheld the permit and canceled the event due to tensions “over race questions.”

Seventeen years later, in 1925, the first annual United States National Spelling Bee was held in Louisville, Kentucky, and was sponsored by The Courier-Journal, a local Louisville newspaper. The winner was eleven-year-old Frank Neuhauser. In celebration of his victory, Master Neuhauser met President Calvin Coolidge, was awarded five hundred dollars in gold pieces, given a hometown parade, and a bicycle by his school in Louisville.

In 1941, the Scripps Howard News Service acquired sponsorship of the spelling contest, and the name changed to the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee. This was later shortened to the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Today, the organization is administered on a not-for-profit basis by The E.W. Scripps Company from its headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio.  The contest has been held every year except 1943-1945 due to World War II, and 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Since 1994, the competition has been regularly televised on the cable-television sports channel, ESPN.

Scripps National Spelling Bee

Although most participants are from the U.S., students from countries such as The Bahamas, Canada, the People’s Republic of China, India, Ghana, Japan, Jamaica, Mexico, and New Zealand have competed in recent years.

Spelling matches have come a long way since the early 19th century. Today, we can view the competition from home and watch movies about the fierce competition and gargantuan effort these kids make to reach the grand stage. If you’re a teacher, student, or parent interested in organizing local spelling competitions, visit the Scripps National Spelling Bee website where you can download information booklets and read more about the awesome kids participating in this yearly event.

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: American tradition, competition, culture, E.W. Scripps Company, education, historic victory, history, Kinney Brothers Publishing Blog, language, Marie Bolden, Scripps Howard News Service, Scripps National Spelling Bee, spellers, Spelling Bees, spelling contests, students

Fun Facts About English #65 – The History of Spelling Bees

07/26/2020 by admin

Fun Facts About English 65 Kinney Brothers Publishing

I hate to admit that, even given multiple tries, I probably wouldn’t be able to spell the two dinosaur names above. I sit in awe of people who spell well. I also know I’m not alone when it comes to my spelling disabilities.

The English language has had spelling issues for a very, very long time. In centuries past, there have been compilers and reformers who tried to catalogue and standardize the English language. From Richard Mulcaster’s The first Part of the Elementarie in 1582, Samuel Johnson’s comprehensive and highly influential dictionary of 1755, and Noah Webster’s 19th-century American dictionary, we are making strides toward standardization, but the myriad exceptions force us to rely on rote learning and memory to be a good speller.

Blue-backed Speller Kinney Brothers Publishing

First published in 1786, Webster’s spelling books, known colloquially as “The Blue-backed Speller,” were an essential part of the elementary school curriculum in the United States for five generations. These spelling primers were the impetus for the earliest spelling contests; an activity to motivate students to learn standardized spelling. The first such spelling matches were recorded in 1808. From about 1850, local events were referred to as “spelling bees.”

The word bee has been used to describe a get-together or communal work, such as a husking bee, a quilting bee, or an apple bee. The word likely comes from a dialectal been or bean, meaning “help given by neighbors” from the Middle English word bene.

Spelling bees were usually held in individual schools and towns and weren’t yet nationally organized. In 1908, the National Education Association (NEA) held the “first national spelling bee” in Cleveland, Ohio as part of its 46th annual convention. The NEA Spelling Bee was a team-based competition held at the Hippodrome Theater where six thousand people attended, including convention speaker, Booker T. Washington.

NEA Spelling Bee Kinney Brothers Publishing

Even before the competition began, some members of the all-White Louisiana team took offense at having to compete on the same stage with Ohio’s racially-integrated teams. Nonetheless, Marie Bolden, a thirteen-year-old Black girl from Cleveland, was named champion and awarded the gold medal. Marie’s victory made national news because it upset the day’s stereotypes about what Black children could or should be allowed to accomplish. Back in New Orleans, the local Black YMCA organized a spelling bee in honor of Miss Bolden’s victory, but the mayor, embarrassed by the upset in Cleveland, withheld the permit and canceled the event due to tensions “over race questions.”

Seventeen years later, in 1925, the first annual United States National Spelling Bee was held in Louisville, Kentucky, and was sponsored by The Courier-Journal, a local Louisville newspaper. The winner was eleven-year-old Frank Neuhauser. In celebration of his victory, young Master Neuhauser met President Calvin Coolidge, was awarded five hundred dollars in gold pieces, given a hometown parade, and a bicycle by his school in Louisville.

In 1941, the Scripps Howard News Service acquired sponsorship of the spelling contest, and the name changed to the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee. This was later shortened to the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Today, the organization is administered on a not-for-profit basis by The E.W. Scripps Company from its headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio.  The contest has been held every year except 1943-1945 due to World War II, and 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Since 1994, the competition has been regularly televised on the cable-television sports channel, ESPN.

Scripps National Spelling Bee

Although most participants are from the U.S., students from countries such as The Bahamas, Canada, the People’s Republic of China, India, Ghana, Japan, Jamaica, Mexico, and New Zealand have competed in recent years.

Spelling matches have come a long way since the early 19th century. Today, we can view the competition from home and watch movies about the fierce competition and gargantuan effort these kids make to reach the grand stage. If you’re a teacher, student, or parent interested in organizing local spelling competitions, visit the Scripps National Spelling Bee website where you can download information booklets and read more about the awesome kids participating in this yearly event.

If you enjoyed this post, you might also be interested in the legacy of the word dude, the history of crossword puzzles, or how Hello, a word used to incite hounds to the chase, became the formal greeting for the telephone!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

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Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: American tradition, competition, culture, Donald's English Classroom, E.W. Scripps Company, education, history, kinney brothers publishing, language, Marie Bolden, Scripps Howard News Service, Scripps National Spelling Bee, spellers, Spelling Bees, spelling contests, students

Fun Facts About English #58 – Why is it called that?

06/19/2020 by admin

Fun Fact About English 58 Kinney Brothers Publishing

Here are ten more words with surprising origins! A few of these words appeared in previous Fun Facts About English posts, but I thought them such swell words, they deserved a second showing!

Ampersand (&)

The ampersand (&) was included in schoolbooks as the 27th character of the English alphabet until the mid 19th century. It was understood not as a vowel or consonant, but as a useful symbol, added to the hind end of the Latin alphabet, and simply known as and. Today, when we recite the ABCs, we often say “X, Y, and Z.” Two centuries ago, children’s alphabet chants included and (&) as the last “letter.” To say “X, Y, Z, and and” was a bit awkward, so the Latin phrase per se – meaning “by or in itself “- was inserted. In recitations, it sounded like this: X, Y, Z, and per se and (&). Over time, and-per-se-and slurred into ampersand, a mondegreen that we use today.

…To Boot

There are many idiomatic phrases and words that include the word boot: to be pulled up by one’s bootstraps, to get the boot, boot camp, etc. None of these has any relationship to the “extra bit of something” when we say “…to boot.”

The boot in “to boot” goes all the way back to the Old English word bōt. It means “advantage, help,” and “to making something good or better.” Over time, it also came to mean “something extra added to a trade.” Ex. “We got a great deal on the hotel room and concert tickets to boot!”

In finance, boot is something you add to a deal to make the exchange equal. For example, if you buy a car with a trade-in and also give the dealer some money, that extra money you add is called “the boot.”

Checkmate

The history of chess goes back almost 15 centuries. The game originated in northern India in the 6th century AD and spread to Persia. When the Arabs conquered Persia, chess was taken up by the Muslim world and subsequently, through the Moorish conquest of Spain, spread to Southern Europe.

“Sheikh” (شيخ‎) is the Arabic word for “chief or head of a tribe.” Players would announce “Sheikh” when the king was in check. “Māt” (مات‎) is an Arabic adjective for “dead, helpless, or defeated.” So the king is in mate when he is ambushed, at a loss, or defeated.

Fall

English Timeline Kinney Brothers Publishing

In Old English, harvest was the season when farmers gathered their crops and prepared them for storage. The word is a derivative of hærfest, an Old Norse word that means “to gather or pluck.”

By the sixteenth century, fall, a shortened version of the phrase “fall of the leaf” was used to describe the third season of the year. During this time, autumn, a word derived from Latin and Old French, was also in common use. Fall and autumn were the preferred words as more people began leaving rural farmlands to move into larger, metropolitan cities. Without farming, the term harvest became less relevant to their lives.

Today, there is a clear preference for autumn in British English and for fall in American English, though both words can be used interchangeably in both places.

Hello

As hard as it is to imagine, before the invention of the telephone in 1876, “hello” wasn’t a proper or even casual greeting whatsoever!

In his laboratories, Thomas Alva Edison would shout “Halloo!” into the mouthpiece of his newly invented strip phonograph to test the device. “Halloo” was a word commonly used to incite hounds to the chase, or as a “call” to attract the attention of someone at a great distance, similar to “Hey!”

Alexander Graham Bell's early telephone Kinney Brothers Publishing
Alexander Graham Bell’s early telephone

Mr. Edison also equipped and supplied Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone invention, a gadget that was (basically) a permanently open line without even a bell. Mr. Edison preferred “Hello” be put in the instruction manual for “calling” the other party to the line, along with “That is all” for ending the exchange. Edison reasoned that “Hello” could be heard from a distance of 10-20 feet and was better than Bell’s nautical recommendation, “Ahoy.”

G.I.

G.I. has been interpreted as standing for garrison issue, government issue, and general infantry. The true progenitor of the abbreviation is galvanized iron.

G.I. appears in Army inventories of galvanized-iron trash cans (G.I. can) and buckets from the early twentieth century. During World War I, the meaning of G.I. was extended to include heavy artillery shells and large bombs. Around this time, G.I. was applied in the “general issue” sense with G.I. shoes, G.I. soap, and G.I. brushes. During or shortly after the war, soldiers began referring to themselves as G.I.s when the abbreviation was recorded as slang for an enlisted man.

In June 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act, commonly known as the G.I. Bill. The bill provided benefits for returning World War II veterans, including funding for college, home loans, and unemployment insurance.

Cartoonist Dave Breger is credited with coining the name G.I. Joe in his weekly comic strip published in Yank magazine beginning in 1942. In 1964, U.S. toy company Hasbro debuted the military-themed G.I. Joe action figure for boys.

John Doe & Richard Roe

“John Doe” and “Richard Roe” originated during the Middle Ages! The fake names were regularly invoked in English legal instruments beginning as early as the reign of England’s King Edward III (1327–1377).

As well as legal instruments, the U.S. courts also use such names to refer to a corpse whose identity is unknown or unconfirmed. There are many variants to the names, including “John Roe,” “Jane Doe,” and “Baby Doe.”

Individuals whose real name is John or Jane Doe report difficulties and unwanted attention, such as being accused of using a pseudonym, being questioned repeatedly by airport security, or suspected of being an incognito celebrity.

Paddywhack

Paddywhack Kinney Brothers Publishing
Dried beef paddywhack.

During the Victorian era, paddywhack came to mean “a slap or a sharp blow,” in part because of its mistaken association with the word whack, an etymologically different word altogether. The original meaning of paddywhack refers to the tough neck ligament found in many four-legged animals such as sheep and cattle. Even today, this chewy and protein-rich ligament is often sold as a dried dog treat.

Red Tape

Red Tape

The idiom means “excessive bureaucracy or adherence to rules” that make conducting one’s affairs slower or more difficult. They include filling out paperwork, obtaining licenses, or having multiple people or committees approve a decision.

It’s generally believed the term originated with the Spanish administration of Charles V, King of Spain. In the early 16th century, the monarch began binding important dossiers with red twine or ribbon in an effort to give priority to particular issues and modernize the administration of his vast empire. The practice was quickly adopted by other European monarchs.

The idiom was popularized after the American Civil War when veterans’ records were tied up in pink or red binding and difficult to access.

Pipe Dream

Pipe dream originates from the 19th century and indicates the dreams experienced by opium users and the instrument they use to smoke it. Today, it refers to a fantastic hope or plan that is impossible to achieve.

The earliest known use of the idiom appeared in an 1890 issue of the Chicago Daily Tribune, referring to aerial navigation: “It has been regarded as a pipe-dream for a good many years.”

If you found this post interesting, you might also be interested in common words that were coined after notorious personalities, body parts that have unusual names, or the origins of collective nouns, such as “A murder of crows.”

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

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When introducing young ESL students to CVC words, Donald’s English Classroom has a variety of activities ready to download and start using today! Click here to check out all our flashcards, game sets, worksheets, and more!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: ampersand, Donald's English Classroom, etymology, fall, G.I., hello, history, John Doe, kinney brothers publshing, language, linguistics, origins, paddywhack, phrases, pipe dream, red tape, Richard Roe, vocabulary, words

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