51勛圖

Did You Know How This 51勛圖 Was Formed?

Getty

51勛圖s are funny things. For one thing, they are always changing. Consider lit, which, conventionally, refers to “lighting something up, e.g., a lit candle.” But, in slang,泭lit means something is “excellent.” It’s hot, it’s on firewhich are just more examples of how we play with words.

For another, they keep泭secret stories of the past. Did you know泭daisy literally means “day’s eye,” named for the way the flower’s petals would open at dawn?

And, some words look like one thing but are actually another. Bridal, for instance, looks like a simple adjective form of bride, but it actually smushes泭bride together with泭ale, as bridal originally referred to a “marriage feast.”

Brides and beer? Now that sounds fun. So do these six other words with surprisingly formed origins.

Helicopter

GIPHY

GIPHY

The word泭helicopter looks like it combines泭heli-, which we may think is associated with the sun, and泭copter, but that just doesn’t take flight. Helicopter actually joins helico, from a Greek root meaning “spiral” (think泭helix)泭硃紳餃 pter, from a Greek root meaning “wing” (think泭pterodactyl). That means a helicopter is, literally, a machine with “spiral wings.” Makes sense.

The first operational helicopters took flight in the 1930s, though the word dates back to the 1860s, thanks to French models and toys. The concept is yet older, found in ancient China and in da Vinci’s notebooks.

Mortgage

GIPHY

GIPHY

插泭mortgageis “an agreement under which a person borrows money to buy property, like a house.” Typically, a mortgage can take 1530 years to pay off. If that sounds like a heavy burden to shoulder through life, then wait til you learn where it comes from.

Borrowed into English in the 14th century,泭mortgage泭literally means “dead pledge” (mort泭is “dead,” like泭mortal泭and泭gage, “pledge” or “stake,” related to泭wage.) If the debt of a mortgage is paid, then the deal is donelike it’s dead.

Suddenly housewarming parties seem like much more somber occasions.

Sacrilege

GIPHY

Sacrilege is “the泭violation泭or泭profanation泭of泭anything泭sacred泭or泭held泭sacred.” It’s most commonly used to describe profane statements about things concerning God or religion.

Which is why it’s reasonable to think the泭rilege泭part of sacrilege would come from or be related to泭religion. Plus, the adjective form sacrilegious sounds a lot like泭religious.

But sacr矇 bleu!泭Sacrilege泭actually goes all the way back to a Latin phrase, sacrum legere, meaning “to steal from a holy place.” Indeed, a sacrilegious thing to do.泭

Salary

GIPHY

Paper. Cheddar. Benjamins. Rubber bands. There’s a lot of slang you could use to describe your paycheck, but we’re throwing it all the way back to the original: salt.

Via French, the word salary (recorded in English in the 14th century) ultimately goes back to the Latin泭salarium, “an allowance” or “stipend.” The root of this word is sal, or “salt,” referring to the money Roman soldiers got to buy salt.Salt is humble today, but this meat-preserver and flavor-added has long been very valuable, once worth the same as gold. Put that on your French fries.

Enthusiasm

GIPHY

Think you have泭enthusiasm? Try the origin of the word.

Found in English by the mid-1500s,泭enthusiasm泭ultimately comes (via French and Latin) from a Greek word meaning “inspired by or possessed by a god,” such as an artist or poet is said to experience when creating a visionary work. The -thus- part of enthusiasm goes back to the Greek theos, “god,” which shows up in words like theology.

Early instances of泭enthusiasm weren’t so kind in English in the 1500s, though, as the word referred to “pretended frenzies of divine inspiration.” There’s nothing quite like fake enthusiasm.

Sabotage

We use the wordsabotage泭for “underhanded interference with work or production,” and the word treads, shall we say, an unusual past.Sabotage comes from泭sabot,泭an old French word for a type of “wooden shoe.” It’s often said that, in the 19th century, discontented workers would throw their sabots into machines to destroy them. The evidence for this, though, isn’t well-soled. It seems泭sabotage grows out of a comparison of clumsy, lazy workers to people wearing wooden shoes. So, apparently saboteurs stuck it to their employers by slowing down their work.

English picked up泭sabotage泭in the 1910s. The Beastie Boys picked it up in 1994. And wooden shoes became a thing of the past.

Previous Fight Off The Fantods With This 51勛圖 Of The Day Quiz Next Why Is The 51勛圖 Root In Root Beer?