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Time: Surprisingly Connected Etymologies 

Alliterative
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Some time-related words and their etymological connections.
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Transcript:
Today in “Surprisingly Connected Etymologies”, we’re marking time!
Hopefully enough time has passed that we’re finally starting to get the pandemic under control (with a lot of help from vaccines, masks, and other safety measures), but of course time will tell. Pandemic is formed from the Greek prefix pan- “all” and the Greek word demos “people”, also found in the word democracy, literally “people-rule”. Demos had the original sense of “district”, coming from the Proto-Indo-European root *da- “to divide”, which also lies behind Old English tima “time, period” and Modern English time, which originally meant “a segment of time” before broadening to mean “time” more generally.
What’s your favourite day of the week? Well etymologically speaking perhaps it should be every day! Though the etymology of both words is debated, day, from Old English dæg, might ultimately come from Proto-Indo-European *dhegwh- “to burn, warm”, so in other words literally meaning “time when the sun is hot”. Since PIE *dh (and voiced aspirates in general) became Latin f, this root might also lie behind Latin “to regard favourably, be well disposed” and favor “good will, support”, which passed through Old French to give us English favour, and thus would be related to Latin fovere, which means “to heat” but also “to cherish”, from which we also get English foment.
Diary and journal on the face of it seem like synonyms that are not etymologically connected. However, they both descend from Latin dies “day” (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dyeu- “to shine” and surprisingly not from the same root as English day). Diary comes from the Latin form diarium “daily allowance, journal”, first appearing in English in the 16th century. Journal comes from the Latin form diurnalis “daily”, coming into English through Old French jornel “a day, time, a day’s travel or work” in the 14th century, originally referring to a book of daily church services. Similarly, journey was originally a day’s travel.
A year and an hour are quite different lengths of time, but etymologically they’re one and the same. They both come from Proto-Indo-European *yer- with a somewhat imprecise meaning of “season” or “year”. This led to Old English gear “year” as well as Greek hora originally “season” or just “period of time”, but eventually one twelfth of a day from sunrise to sunset. It wasn’t until after the word passed through Latin and Old French that it gained the more precise measurement of 60 minutes. Horoscope comes from the same root meaning literally “observer of time”.
It’s getting close to conference season for academics like me, and many of us will be heading off to attend seminars about various topics, and if we’re lucky we might even hear some seminal research. Seminal and seminar come from the Latin word semen “seed”. It’s basically an agricultural metaphor: seminal work is at the seed stage; to disseminate information is to scatter it like seeds; Latin seminarium “plant nursery” gained figurative educational senses in seminary and seminar. All these words go back to the Proto-Indo-European root *se- “to sow”, which through the Germanic branch also gives us the words sow and seed. This root also produced the Latin verb serere “to sow” and from it the noun satio “a sowing, a planting”, which became Old French seison and English season. As its form changed so too did its sense, shifting from “the act of sowing” to “the time of sowing” and then broadened to mean “time of year” in general. The verb to season, as with spices, comes from the notion of a fruit seasoning or ripening and thus becoming more flavourful as it ripens. So wish me luck in my conference going, and hope that I’m not too much at risk from that pandemic!
Thanks for watching! This is one in a series of occasional short videos about connected etymologies; to see more, you can also follow the Endless Knot on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.

Опубликовано:

 

4 апр 2022

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Комментарии : 33   
@arcanics1971
@arcanics1971 2 года назад
Perfect *timing* too. I was in bad mood and an etymological hit was just what I needed to cheer me up!
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
😄⏲ Glad we could help!
@alfredlear4141
@alfredlear4141 2 года назад
Lovely, fascinating 👏👏👏👏
@OmegaWolf747
@OmegaWolf747 2 года назад
We sow our seeds in due season.
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Very nice 😄
@rayyankhan343
@rayyankhan343 2 года назад
Loving the look
@Stormy38044
@Stormy38044 2 года назад
Good luck in your conference-going, and thanks for the vid!
@gwyndolinds-en8yt
@gwyndolinds-en8yt 2 года назад
Good work on the seminars! And thanks always for the awesome job here on the internet!
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Thank you!
@jomana1109
@jomana1109 2 года назад
Man every time I watch your videos I get smarter haha, also wondering, how many languages do you speak?
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Ha, thanks! I actually only speak two languages (English and, sort of, French). But I can read Latin, Old English, and (with effort) Old Norse. :)
@jomana1109
@jomana1109 2 года назад
@@Alliterative Damn, nothing short of impressive! I’m learning Gothic myself and I know how hard these things can be sometimes.
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Oh, fun! Good luck with that, Gothic is really interesting.
@jomana1109
@jomana1109 2 года назад
@@Alliterative Thanks !
@zhilyaabdulwahed4871
@zhilyaabdulwahed4871 2 года назад
Well done. I have analyzed the word "jour" differently. In Kurdish both "Day" and Sun" are called "Rozh." Thus, I think Jour and Rozh just the position of the letters has been exchanged.
@ronaldderooij1774
@ronaldderooij1774 2 года назад
I love this. I would have studied it, if I were not afraid of joblesness after study. So, it became political science and environment. No regrets. But I still love this as well.
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Thanks! One of the things I hope to do is make some of this fun stuff available for people who didn't have a chance to study it in school, for whatever reason. :)
@marycervantes7059
@marycervantes7059 2 года назад
@@Alliterative Wow! Thanks! I love Languages - studying Chinese now - but, I want to study other languages too! It is just so hard, it is taking a lot longer to finish the Duolingo course! Two years and I have yet to master just half of it! LOL
@mcmasti
@mcmasti 2 года назад
Good to know! Surprised this isn't on TikTok! 😉
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Ha! Good point!
@MagicJesus
@MagicJesus Год назад
Thanks for this excellent video. I hope to use a small piece of this in an upcoming video of my own, and, will credit "the endless knot'.
@zhilyaabdulwahed4871
@zhilyaabdulwahed4871 2 года назад
Great!
@argentinidomador7239
@argentinidomador7239 2 года назад
Very interesting
@zak-a-roo264
@zak-a-roo264 2 года назад
Sowing the Seeds of Love
@volodymyrostrovskyi533
@volodymyrostrovskyi533 Год назад
There're surprisingly many time-related translator's false friends in Slavis languages, probably because some items got another meaning in some languages. In Ukrainian (also Polish and probable some other languages), година (hodyna) is an hour, while in South Slavic languages Godina is a year. In most of Slavic languages Sunday is something like неділя/nedjelja, but in russian неделя means week. Also, russian час (chas) meaning hour is nothing like Ukrainian час meaning the Time itself. And in Ukrainian доба (doba) currently means 24 hours, while in older Slavic language it meant just some time period. Year in Ukrainian is Рік (rik), in other cases it changes to roku/rokom etc., but in Croatian (and probably the neighbouring languages) it's just some period of time, for example, "u roku 2 dana" means that (something needs to be done) during the 2 days
@priyamastibhati
@priyamastibhati 2 года назад
Very cute. If just followed Sanskrit, you will see the roots of most common (samaan) English words. Sanskrit has a root verb directory and with slight variations one can make hundreds of words - like we see in the scattered IE language. So follow the source.
@priyamastibhati
@priyamastibhati 2 года назад
The word “etymology” derived from “satyam”. If only euro-centrists looked beyond the immediate horizons life would be meaningfully simple
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
Respectfully, Sanskrit is a cognate of English, not its parent language. I recently released a video discussing some of the evidence for the Indo-European hypothesis: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-cz7ekNq2Bhk.html I recognise that you probably won't agree with me, but I am convinced by the technical elements and the evidence, and I follow the majority consensus of scientific linguists worldwide.
@cerberaodollam
@cerberaodollam 2 года назад
I would say you're only at risk from a psyop if you believe in it. 😉 On that note, do you have any juicy etymological data connected to words like 'propaganda', 'distraction', 'hoodwink' and so on?
@danielhopkins296
@danielhopkins296 2 года назад
Is this the crowning achievement of philology or just an elementary perusal from a long lost list of etymologies. Furthermore, if there is not attestation for your word you should mention the hypothetical root as being reconstructed.
@Alliterative
@Alliterative 2 года назад
It's clearly not the crowning achievement of philology, it's a fun video about some etymologies. And I mark the roots that are reconstructed as such, that's what the * signals. PIE roots are all reconstructed, so it would be very repetitive to say that every time. If you don't enjoy this type of material, that's fine, but it's not trying to be anything more than an interesting tidbit.
@danielhopkins296
@danielhopkins296 2 года назад
@@Alliterative I appreciate the feedback. The world has enough repeaters. Why not find your own long lost cognates ? Anyway, I apologize if my remarks were cold. I'm sure some people will find your work interesting, thnxs again for the feedback 🙏
@johncracker5217
@johncracker5217 10 месяцев назад
Did you know that Friedrich Nietzsche was a philologist of titanic intellect. Btw it’s called indo aryan
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