If you are looking for a language with a continous history in the British Isles for 4000 years (or some such), then there is one. Welsh. Developed from the Cletic Brython spoken by the inhabitants for centuries already when the Romans arrived.Mise said:Well what I meant was, is there a word in the language we call English today which was spoken in the British Isles 2000 years ago? I think that's more interesting to find than a word which was once spoken by Anglo-Saxons (since most words are Anglo-Saxon or Latin in origin, it would be MORE interesting to find one that had survived 4000 years of colonisation and language bastardisation).
There is english hound and german Dogge.Marla_Singer said:The word dog is actually a very interesting one because it's totally different in most languages :
German : Hund
Yeah that's what I suspectedVerbose said:If you are looking for a language with a continous history in the British Isles for 4000 years (or some such), then there is one. Welsh. Developed from the Cletic Brython spoken by the inhabitants for centuries already when the Romans arrived.
Question is if any of it passed inte the Germanic language of the Angles and Saxons who started arriving sometime after 300 AD.
One of my primary school teachers said that "posh" was an acronym for "post outward starboard home", which is where posh people stayed on ships from Britain to India and back, to avoid being in the sun. I don't believe him thoughDoes anybody know the origin of the words "posh" and "blighty"?
Verbose said:I've got this linguistic thing I like to tease British people with.
Does anybody know the origin of the words "posh" and "blighty"?
So far no one I've tried them on has had a clue.![]()
(I'm sure someone around here knows. Otherwise I'll post what I've read about them.)
Dumb pothead said:Sanskrit must be a common anscestor.
That may be, but I'm not sure that the lack of a shipping company offering tickets in this fashion discredits the etymology. All that is necessary is that you have a group of people making the tripping on a somewhat regular basis.Illustrious said:Posh is another of those difficult ones. The "port out, starboard home" explanation which Mise mentions is generally discredited by etymologists, not least because there is no evidence that any shipping company ever offered tickets on such a basis. Michael Quinion's recent book on folk etymology even uses it as a title - in the book, he makes the fairly sensible suggestion that any proposed etymology (pre-1950) which depends on an acronym is almost certainly false. The correct answer is: nobody knows.
ferenginar said:My favourite etymology would be Testify, which comes from the Roman custom of swearing on ones testis.
Marla_Singer said:The word dog is actually a very interesting one because it's totally different in most languages :
Albanian : qeni
Arabic: كَلب (kalb)
Basque : txakur
Bulgarian : куче (kuče)
Cherokee : gitli gili
Chinese : 狗 (gou)
Czech : pes
Finnish : koira
French : chien
German : Hund
Greek : σκύλος (skilos)
Hebrew : כֶּלֶב m (keh-lev)
Hindi : कुत्ता (kuta)
Hungarian : kutya
Indonesian : anjing
Irish (Celtic) : madra
Italian : cane
Japanese : 犬 (いぬ, inu)
Korean : 개 (gae)
Lithuanian : uo
Maltese : dib
Polish : pies
Portuguese : cão
Russian : собака (sobaka)
Scottish : cu
Spanish : perro
Turkish : köpek
Vietnamese : chó
The only roots which seems the same is several languages is the Germanic "Hund" and the Slavic "Pes". It's also funny that on the list above the Hungarian way to name a dog looks so close the Hindi way to name it !![]()
Mapache said:Romanic languages dogs derive of canis.
Vanadorn said:Well:
* assassin is derived from hashhishyyin - those who would imbimbe the drug and listen to the old man on the mountain to go kill others with poison.