Gallimaufry: A Hodgepodge of Our Vanishing VocabularyOxford University Press, 2006 - 272 sider When did you last hear someone refer to the wireless? What was the original paraphernalia? Would you wear a billycock? Language is always changing, and in Gallimaufry: A Hodge-Podge of Words Vanishing from Our Vocabulary Michael Quinion has gathered together some fascinating examples of words and meanings which have vanished from our language. Sometimes a word is lost when the thing it describes becomes obsolete, sometimes it survives in a figurative sense while the original meaning is lost, and sometimes it simply gives way to a more popular alternative. The story of these and many other words opens a window into the lives of past speakers of the English language. |
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Side 14
... nineteenth century to treat gonorrhoea , confirming that the herbalists of an earlier century were on the right track . Americans would once have known of cubeb cigarettes , smoked like the mentholated type , and available from the late ...
... nineteenth century to treat gonorrhoea , confirming that the herbalists of an earlier century were on the right track . Americans would once have known of cubeb cigarettes , smoked like the mentholated type , and available from the late ...
Side 64
... nineteenth century the verb coddle was created from caudle ; it was later extended to molly- coddle , using molly in its disparaging slang sense of a milksop or effeminate man ( molly - houses in the eighteenth century were meeting ...
... nineteenth century the verb coddle was created from caudle ; it was later extended to molly- coddle , using molly in its disparaging slang sense of a milksop or effeminate man ( molly - houses in the eighteenth century were meeting ...
Side 251
... nineteenth century , matching the exuberance of the period . The nineteenth - century American grammarian William Fowler feared that as English spread across the continent , people would " break loose from the laws of language ...
... nineteenth century , matching the exuberance of the period . The nineteenth - century American grammarian William Fowler feared that as English spread across the continent , people would " break loose from the laws of language ...
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Food and Drink | 4 |
Health and Medicine | 52 |
Entertainment and Leisure 9335 | 96 |
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Gallimaufry: A Hodgepodge of Our Vanishing Vocabulary Michael Quinion Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2008 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
ancient appeared ball bear-baiting became boiled Britain called cards carriage caudle cinnamon cittern classic cloth cock colour common cook cordials created Cubeb Culpeper dance derives described device Dictionary disease dish drink early eggs eighteenth century England entertainment fabric fashion flavoured gallons German ginger goffering iron Greek Greek word herbs horse included invented Italian Jane Austen kitchen known later linen London measure meat medicine medieval mentioned mixture modern name comes nineteenth century nutmeg Old English Old French Old French word Old Norse once origin Oxford English Dictionary Pease pottage pease pudding pepper Pepys period person physician piccadils played players popular posset pottage quadrille recorded refer sailors Samuel Pepys sauce sense seventeenth century Shakespeare sixteenth century slang sometimes Spanish spices sugar sweet telegraph term tincture Tobias Smollett treacle Trilby turn usually vanished verb verjuice vocabulary wine women woollen word meaning wrote