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{{Short description|Process of reinterpretive word formation}}
{{+r|date=March 2016}}{{about|a technical term in linguistics|incorrect popular etymologies|false etymology}}
{{About|word change through popular usage|popular theories of word origins|false etymology}}
'''Folk etymology''', '''pseudo-etymology''',<ref>''[[Oxford English Dictionary]]'' (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.</ref> or '''reanalysis''' is change in a word or phrase over time resulting from the replacement of an unfamiliar form by a more familiar one.<ref>''Oxford English Dictionary Online'', "folk-etymology, usually, the popular perversion of the form of words in order to render it apparently significant"</ref><ref>''Routledge Dictionary of Language and Linguistics'' [https://books.google.com/books?id=PJKrODvtm7IC&pg=PA693&dq=encyclopedia+linguistics'&hl=en&ei=Vt7QTLKKDISglAf6uKzgDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CD8Q6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=folk%20etymology&f=false Folk Etymology]</ref><ref>[[R.L. Trask]], ''Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=EHeGzQ8wuLQC&dq=oxford+linguistics%27&q=folk+etymology#v=snippet&q=folk%20etymology&f=false Folk Etymology]</ref><ref>"Folk Etymology", p 142, ''The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Linguistics''</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=ONY_EVd9zNYC&printsec=frontcover&dq=winfred+lehmann+linguistics&hl=en&ei=j-TQTJaKOoOKlwfnsPXQDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CDwQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=folk%20etymology&f=false "Folk Etymology"]
[[Winfred Lehmann]], ''Historical linguistics: an Introduction.''</ref><ref name=langhist>{{cite book|last=Sihler|first=Andrew L.|title=Language History: an introduction|publisher=John Benjamins|year=2000|pages=86&ndash;88|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=85zS_w_AaP0C&pg=PA86&dq=%22folk+etymology%22| isbn=978-90-272-3697-5}}</ref> Unanalyzable borrowings from foreign languages, like ''[[asparagus]]'', or old compounds such as ''samblind'' which have lost their iconic motivation (since one or more of the [[morpheme]]s making them up, like ''sam-'', which meant "semi-", has become obscure) are reanalyzed in a more or less semantically plausible way, yielding, in these examples, ''sparrow grass'' and ''sandblind''.<ref name="Raimo Anttila 1989 pp 92-93">Raimo Anttila, ''Historical and Comparative Linguistics'' (Benjamins, 1989) ISBN 90-272-3557-0, pp 92-93</ref>


'''Folk etymology''' – also known as '''(generative) popular etymology''',<ref name="Zuckerman20032">{{cite book |last=Zuckermann |first=Ghil'ad |url=http://www.palgrave.com/br/book/9781403917232 |title=Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew |publisher=[[Palgrave Macmillan]] |year=2003 |isbn=978-1403917232 |author-link=Ghil'ad Zuckermann}}</ref> '''analogical reformation''', '''(morphological)''' '''reanalysis''' and '''etymological reinterpretation'''<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Cienkowski|first=Witold|date=January 1969|title=The initial stimuli in the processes of etymological reinterpretation(so-called folk etymology)|journal=Scando-Slavica|volume=15|issue=1|pages=237–245|doi=10.1080/00806766908600524|issn=0080-6765}}</ref> – is a change in a word or phrase resulting from the replacement of an unfamiliar form by a more familiar one through popular usage.<ref>{{Cite OED1 |folk-etymology}}</ref><ref name="Sihler2000">{{cite book|last=Sihler|first=Andrew|title=Language History: An introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BXlAYlCSoZQC|year=2000|publisher=John Benjamins|isbn=90-272-8546-2}}</ref><ref name="Trask2000">{{cite book|last=Trask|first=Robert Lawrence|author-link=Larry Trask|title=The Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EHeGzQ8wuLQC|year=2000|publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=978-1-57958-218-0}}</ref> The form or the meaning of an archaic, foreign, or otherwise unfamiliar word is reinterpreted as resembling more familiar words or [[morpheme]]s.
The term ''folk etymology'', a [[loan translation]] from the 19th-century academic [[German language|German]] '''''Volksetymologie''''',<ref>[[Ernst Förstemann]]'s essay ''Ueber Deutsche Volksetymologie'' in the 1852 work ''Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete des Deutschen, Griechischen und Lateinischen''</ref> is a technical one in [[philology]] and [[historical linguistics]], referring to the ''change of form'' in the word itself, not to any actual explicit popular analysis.<ref name="Raimo Anttila 1989 pp 92-93"/>


The term ''folk etymology'' is a [[loan translation]] from [[German language|German]] ''Volksetymologie'', coined by [[Ernst Förstemann]] in 1852.<ref name="Forstemann">{{cite book|last=Förstemann|first=Ernst|editor=Adalbert Kuhn|title=Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete des Deutschen, Griechischen und Lateinischen|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6kMNAAAAYAAJ|year=1852|publisher=F. Dümmler.|chapter=Ueber Deutsche volksetymologie}}</ref> Folk etymology is a [[Productivity (linguistics)|productive]] process in [[historical linguistics]], [[language change]], and [[social relation|social interaction]].<ref>See, e.g. [[Ghil'ad Zuckermann]], [http://www.zuckermann.org/pdf/ENGINEERING.pdf "'<nowiki/>'''Etymythological''' Othering' and the Power of 'Lexical Engineering' in Judaism, Islam and Christianity. A Socio-Philo(sopho)logical Perspective"], in ''Explorations in the Sociology of Language and Religion'' (2006), ed. by Tope Omoniyi & [[Joshua A. Fishman]], Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp.&nbsp;237–258.</ref> Reanalysis of a word's history or original form can affect its spelling, pronunciation, or meaning. This is frequently seen in relation to [[loanword]]s or words that have become archaic or obsolete.
==As a productive force==
The technical term "folk etymology", a translation of the [[German language|German]] ''Volksetymologie'' from [[Ernst Förstemann]]'s essay ''Ueber Deutsche Volksetymologie'' in the 1852 work ''Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete des Deutschen, Griechischen und Lateinischen'' (Journal of Comparative Linguistic Research in the Areas of German, Greek and Latin), is used in the science of [[historical linguistics]] to refer to a change in the form of a word caused by erroneous popular beliefs about its derivation.


Folk/popular etymology may also refer to a popular false belief about the etymology of a word or phrase that does not lead to a change in the form or meaning. To disambiguate the usage of the term "folk/popular etymology", [[Ghil'ad Zuckermann]] proposes a clear-cut distinction between the [[derivational-only popular etymology]] (DOPE) and the generative popular etymology (GPE): the DOPE refers to a popular false etymology involving no [[neologization]], and the GPE refers to neologization generated by a popular false etymology.<ref name="Zuckerman20032" />
Erroneous etymologies can exist for many reasons. Some are reasonable interpretations of the evidence that happen to be false. For a given word there may often have been many serious attempts by scholars to propose etymologies based on the best information available at the time, and these can be later modified or rejected as linguistic scholarship advances. The results of [[medieval etymology]], for example, were plausible given the insights available at the time, but have mostly been rejected by modern linguists. The etymologies of [[Humanism|humanist]] scholars in the early modern period began to produce more reliable results, but many of their hypotheses have been superseded. Until academic linguistics developed the comparative study of [[philology]] and the development of the laws underlying [[sound changes]], the derivation of words was a matter mostly of guess-work.


Examples of words created or changed through folk etymology include the English dialectal form [[wikt:sparrowgrass|''sparrowgrass'']], originally from Greek {{lang|el|ἀσπάραγος}} ("[[asparagus]]") remade by analogy to the more familiar words ''sparrow'' and ''grass''.<ref name="Anttila1989">{{cite book|last=Anttila|first=Raimo|title=Historical and Comparative Linguistics|url=https://archive.org/details/historicalcompar00antt|url-access=registration|year=1989|publisher=John Benjamins|isbn=90-272-3556-2}}</ref> When the alteration of an unfamiliar word is limited to a single person, it is known as an [[eggcorn]].
The phenomenon becomes especially interesting when it feeds back into the development of the word and thus becomes a part of a new etymology. Believing a word to have a certain origin, people begin to pronounce, spell, or otherwise use the word in a manner appropriate to that perceived origin, in a kind of misplaced [[pedantry]]. Thus a new standard form of the word appears which has been influenced by the misconception. This popular etymologizing has had a powerful influence on the forms which words take. Examples in English include "[[crayfish]]" or "crawfish", from the French ''crevis''; "sand-blind", from the older ''samblind'' (i.e. semi-, half-blind); or "chaise lounge" for the original French ''chaise longue,'' "long chair".<ref>"The Origins and Development of the English Language", 4th ed., Thomas Pyles and John Algeo, 1993.</ref>


== Productive force ==
In heraldry, [[canting arms]] (which may express a name by one or more elements only significant by virtue of the supposed etymology) may reinforce a folk etymology for a noun proper, usually of a place.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}}
The technical term "folk etymology" refers to a change in the form of a word caused by erroneous popular suppositions about its [[etymology]]. Until the academic development of [[comparative linguistics]] and description of laws underlying [[Sound change|sound changes]], the derivation of a word was mostly guess-work. Speculation about the original form of words in turn feeds back into the development of the word and thus becomes a part of a new etymology.<ref name="EB1911">{{EB1911|inline=y|wstitle=Etymology|volume=9|pages=864–865}}</ref>


Believing a word to have a certain origin, people begin to pronounce, spell, or otherwise use the word in a manner appropriate to that perceived origin. This popular etymologizing has had a powerful influence on the forms which words take. Examples in English include ''[[crayfish]]'' or ''crawfish'', which are not historically related to ''fish'' but come from [[Middle English]] ''crevis'', [[cognate]] with French ''écrevisse''. Likewise ''chaise lounge'', from the original French ''chaise longue'' ("long chair"), has come to be associated with the word ''lounge''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Pyles |first1=Thomas |last2=Algeo |first2=John |title=The Origins and Development of the English Language |edition=4th |year=1993 |location=New York |publisher=Harcourt Brace Jovanovich|isbn=0030970547}}</ref>
==Examples of words modified by folk etymology==
In linguistic change caused by folk etymology, the form of a word changes so that it better matches its popular rationalisation. Typically this happens either to unanalyzable foreign words or to compounds where the word underlying one part of the compound becomes obsolete.


== Related phenomena ==
===Examples of Type A (foreign words)===
{{further|Rebracketing|Back-formation}}


Other types of language change caused by reanalysis of the structure of a word include [[rebracketing]] and [[back-formation]].
*''[[Wikt:andiron|andiron]]'', from Middle English ''aundyre'', ''aundiren'', was altered from [[Anglo-Norman language|Anglo-Norman]] ''andier'' by association with ''iron'' (ME ''ire'', ''iren'').
*''[[Wikt:artichoke|artichoke]]'', from the Italian ''articiocco''; 'choke' presumably as you might choke if you ate the hairy fibrous end of the plant. In French it has become 'artichou' with the chou part probably a reference to its resemblance to a cabbage.
*''[[Wikt:causeway|causeway]]'' was modified from obsolete ''[[Wikt:causey|causey]]'' (Anglo-Norman French ''causée'') to assimilate it with ''way''.
*''Charterhouse'' from Chartreuse, the feminine of ''[[Chartreux]]''.
*''[[Wikt:cockroach|cockroach]]'' was borrowed from Spanish ''cucaracha'' but was folk-etymologized as ''[[Wikt:cock|cock]]'' + ''[[Common Roach|roach]]''.
*''[[Wiktionary:crayfish|crayfish]]'' from Middle English ''[[Wikt:crevis#Middle English|crevis]]'' (from [[Anglo-Norman language|Anglo-Norman]] ''creveis''), due to assimilation with ''fish''.
*''[[Wikt:female|female]]'' (Old French ''femelle'', diminutive of ''femme'' "woman"), by assimilation with ''[[Wikt:male|male]]'' (Old French ''masle'', from Latin ''masculus'').
*''[[Wiktionary:liquorice|liquorice]]'', a British variant spelling of ''[[Wiktionary:licorice|licorice]]'', from the supposition that it has something to do with liquid,<ref>"The development of [[Late Latin]] ''liquiritia'' was in part influenced by Latin ''liquēre'' 'to flow', in reference to the process of treating the root to obtain its extract." {{cite book |title=The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology |last=Barnhart |first=Robert K. |editor-link=[[Robert Barnhart]] |year=1988 |publisher=H.W. Wilson |isbn=978-0-8242-0745-8| page=593}}</ref> a supposition made twice before in Anglo-Normand ''licoris'' (influenced by ''licor'' "liquor") and [[Late Latin]] ''liquirītia'' (influenced by Latin ''liquēre''), though the ultimate origin is Greek ''glykýrriza'' "sweet root".
*''[[Wiktionary:penthouse|penthouse]]'' from ''[[Wiktionary:pentice|pentice]]'', borrowed from [[Anglo-Norman language|Anglo-Norman]] ''pentiz'' "attached building" (ultimately from Latin ''appendicium'' "appendage"). Note that ''pentice'' continues as a technical term in English.
*''[[Wiktionary:posthumous|posthumous]]'', as though related to ''[[humus]]'', [grave-]soil, although it is a specialized sense of Latin ''postumus'', "last [legitimate child]" i.e., one born after the death of the father.{{Citation needed|date=May 2015}}
*''[[Wiktionary:sacalait|sacalait]]'', modeled after [[Cajun French]] for "milk bag" due to the fish's white base color but actually an alteration of Choctaw ''saklit''
*''[[Wiktionary:sparrowgrass|sparrow-grass]]'', a dialectal form of ''[[Wiktionary:asparagus|asparagus]]''.
*''[[Wiktionary:York|York]]'' came from the Old Norse ''[[Wiktionary:Jórvík#Old Norse|Jórvík]]'', meaning "horse bay", which was re-interpreted from Old English ''[[Wiktionary:Eoforwic|Eoforwic]]'', meaning "wild-boar village", which was re-interpreted from Latin ''[[Wiktionary:Eboracum|Eboracum]]'', from Celtic *''Eborakon'' (cf. [[Welsh language|Welsh]] ''Efrog''), meaning "yew thicket, stand of yew-trees" (cf. [[Scottish Gaelic]] ''iubhar'', Welsh ''efwr'' "cow parsnip").


In rebracketing, users of the language change, misinterpret, or reinterpret the location of a boundary between words or [[morpheme]]s. For example, the [[Old French]] word {{lang|fro|orenge}} {{gloss|orange tree}} comes from [[Arabic]] {{lang|ar|rtl=yes|النَّرَنْج}} {{transl|ar|Wehr|an-naranj}} {{gloss|the orange tree}}, with the initial {{angbr|n}} of {{transl|ar|naranj}} understood as part of the [[Article (grammar)|article]].<ref>{{cite dictionary | year = 2013 | title = orange ''n''.¹ and ''adj''.¹ | dictionary= Oxford English Dictionary online | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | url =http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/132163 |access-date=2013-09-30 |url-access=subscription |doi=10.1093/OED/1138553349}}</ref> Rebracketing in the opposite direction saw the Middle English {{lang|enm|a napron}} become ''an apron''.<ref>{{cite dictionary |dictionary=Oxford English Dictionary |entry=apron, n. |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=March 2024 |doi=10.1093/OED/6544240544 |entry-url=https://www.oed.com/dictionary/apron_n?tab=etymology#48918 |entry-url-access=subscription}}</ref>
===Examples of Type B (one part becomes obsolete)===


In back-formation, a new word is created by removing elements from an existing word that are interpreted as [[affix]]es. For example, [[Italian language|Italian]] {{lang|it|pronuncia}} {{gloss|pronunciation, accent}} is derived from the verb {{lang|it|pronunciare}} {{gloss|to pronounce, to utter}} and English ''edit'' derives from ''editor''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Crystal|first=David|title=Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics|year=2011|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-1-4443-5675-5}}</ref> Some cases of back-formation are based on folk etymology.
*''[[Wiktionary:bridegroom|bridegroom]]'' from Old English ''[[Wiktionary:bryd-guma|bryd-guma]]'' "bride-man", after the Old English word ''[[Wiktionary:guma|guma]]'' "man" (cognate with Latin ''homo'') fell out of use.
*the verb ''[[Wiktionary:buttonhole|buttonhole]]'' in the sense "to detain in conversation", from ''buttonhold'' (originally a loop of string that held a button down)
*''[[Wiktionary:catty-corner|catty-corner]]'' and ''[[Wiktionary:kitty-corner|kitty-corner]]'', modified from ''[[Wiktionary:catercorner|cater-corner]]'', after ''cater'' "four" had become obsolete.
*''[[Wikt:curry favor|curry favour]]'' from [[Middle English]] ''curry favel'', after ''favel'' "chestnut horse" (a traditional symbol of duplicity) became obsolete.
*''[[Wiktionary:hangnail|hangnail]]'' from Middle English ''[[Wiktionary:agnail|agnail]]'' (Old English ''angnægl'', cognate with ''[[Wiktionary:anguish|anguish]]'' and ''[[Wiktionary:anger|anger]]'').
*''[[Wiktionary:island|island]]'' was respelled from ''iland'' (although without any pronunciation change), from [[Old English]] ''ī(e)gland'' after ''ī(e)g'' "island" became obsolete. The new spelling was evidently based on an analysis of ''island'' as ''isle-land'', from ''[[Wiktionary:isle|isle]]'' (an [[Old French]] word, going back to Latin ''insula'').
*The archaic term ''[[Wiktionary:lanthorn|lanthorn]]'' was a folk etymology from ''[[Wiktionary:lantern|lantern]]'' (as old lanterns were [[glazing (window)|glazed]] with strips of cows' [[horn (anatomy)|horn]]), which never displaced the original term.
*''[[Wiktionary:sand-blind|sand-blind]]'' (as if "blinded by the sand") from [[Old English]] ''sam-blind'' "half-blind" (''sam-'' is a once-common prefix cognate with "semi-").
*''[[Wiktionary:shamefaced|shamefaced]]'' from ''[[Wiktionary:shamefast|shamefast]]'' "caught in shame". In this case, the original meaning of ''fast'' &mdash; "fixed in place," cognate of modern German ''fassen'' &mdash; is not completely obsolete but is restricted mostly to forms of the verb ''fasten'' and to frozen expressions such as "stuck fast," "hold fast," and "fast and loose."
*''[[Wiktionary:wormwood|wormwood]]'' replaced [[Middle English]] ''wermode'', from [[Old English]] ''wermōd'', with ''worm'' referring to its leaves being used as a vermifuge, and ''wood'' for its bitter taste; cf. dialectal [[German language|German]] ''Wurmtod'' ( ← ''Wurm'' "worm") vs. standard ''Wermut'' or [[Dutch language|Dutch]] ''wormmoedt'' vs. ''wermoet''. The Germanic terms (incl. Dutch ''wermoet'') come from *''warja-mōdō'', a compound of ''warjanan'' "to hinder" + ''mōdaz'' "the mind", perhaps in reference to the effects of [[absinthism]]; ''cf.'' the use of the cognate term ''[[Wiktionary:vermouth|vermouth]]'' for another alcoholic beverage.


==Examples of folk etymologies borrowed from other languages==
== Examples in English ==
In linguistic change caused by folk etymology, the form of a word changes so that it better matches its popular rationalisation. Typically this happens either to unanalysable foreign words or to compounds where the word underlying one part of the compound becomes obsolete.
* A common incorrect explanation of the origin of the term ''[[windjammer]]'' consists of an introduction into English of a folk etymology of the term common in German and Dutch. Both these languages have a verb "jammer(e)n" (borrowed from Dutch into English as ''[[wikt:yammer|yammer]]'') meaning "to wail" and since people were not aware that the term "windjammer" originally came from English, the folk etymology claims "windjammer" refers to the typical sound of strong winds blowing through the rigging. In fact, the word comes from the English word "to jam" because the sails are so large that they seem to "jam" the wind.<ref>Longman Exams Dictionary CD</ref>


=== Loanwords ===
==Examples of word meanings modified by a folk-etymology-like process==
There are many examples of words borrowed from foreign languages, and subsequently changed by folk etymology.
A process similar to folk etymology may result in a change to the meaning of a word based on an imagined etymology connecting it to an unrelated but similar-sounding word. Often this comes about either through the confusion of a foreign or obsolete word (similar to types A and B above) with a more common word, but it can also result from confusion of two words that have become [[homophone]]s. Examples:
*The term ''forlorn hope'' originally meant "storming party, body of skirmishers"<ref name="Brown">Brown, Lesley (ed.). 2002. ''Shorter Oxford English Dictionary'', vol. 1, A–M. 5th ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 1600.</ref> and is a borrowing from Dutch ''verloren hoop'' "lost troop", where ''hoop'' is cognate with English ''[[Wiktionary:heap|heap]]''. But confusion with English ''[[Wiktionary:hope|hope]]'' has given the term an additional meaning of "hopeless venture".


The spelling of many borrowed words reflects folk etymology. For example, ''[[Wikt:andiron|andiron]]'' borrowed from Old French was variously spelled {{lang|enm|aundyre}} or {{lang|enm|aundiren}} in Middle English, but was altered by association with ''iron''.<ref>{{cite OED1|andiron, n.|year=1884}}</ref> Other Old French loans altered in a similar manner include ''[[belfry (architecture)|belfry]]'' (from {{lang|fro|berfrey}}) by association with ''bell'', ''female'' (from {{lang|fro|femelle}}) by ''male'', and ''penthouse'' (from {{lang|fro|apentis}}) by ''house''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=penthouse {{!}} Etymology, origin and meaning of penthouse by etymonline |url=https://www.etymonline.com/word/penthouse |access-date=2022-11-30 |website=www.etymonline.com |language=en}}</ref> The variant spelling of ''licorice'' as ''[[wikt:liquorice|liquorice]]'' comes from the supposition that it has something to do with liquid.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology |last=Barnhart |first=Robert K. |year=1988 |publisher=H.W. Wilson |isbn=978-0-8242-0745-8|page=593|quote=The development of Late Latin {{lang|la|liquiritia}} was in part influenced by Latin {{lang|la|liquēre}} {{gloss|to flow}}, in reference to the process of treating the root to obtain its extract.}}</ref> Anglo-Norman {{lang|xno|licoris}} (influenced by {{lang|xno|licor}} {{gloss|liquor}}) and [[Late Latin]] {{lang|la|liquirītia}} were respelled for similar reasons, though the ultimate origin of all three is Ancient Greek {{lang|grc|γλυκύρριζα}} {{transl|grc|glucúrrhiza}} {{gloss|sweet root}}.<ref>{{Cite OED1|liquorice licorice, n.|year=1903}}</ref>
==Further examples==
See the following articles that discuss folk etymologies for their subjects:
*[[belfry (architecture)]]
*[[blunderbuss]]
*[[chaise longue]]
*[[crawfish]]
*[[dormouse]]
*[[cucking stool|ducking stool]]
*[[Jerusalem artichoke]] (from Italian, ''girasole'')
*[[Jordan almonds]] (from French, ''jardin'')
*[[pumpernickle]]
*[[serviceberry]] (''Sorbus'')
*[[Welsh rarebit]]
*[[Wheatear]]


Reanalysis of loan words can affect their spelling, pronunciation, or meaning. The word ''cockroach'', for example, was borrowed from Spanish {{lang|es|cucaracha}} but was assimilated to the existing English words ''cock'' and ''[[Common Roach|roach]]''.<ref>{{cite OED1|cockroach, n.|year=1891}}</ref> The phrase ''[[forlorn hope]]'' originally meant "storming party, body of skirmishers"<ref name="Brown">{{cite dictionary |editor-last=Brown |editor-first=Lesley |year=2002 |title=Shorter Oxford English Dictionary |volume=1: A–M |edition=5th |location=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=1600}}</ref> from Dutch {{lang|nl|verloren hoop}} "lost troop". But confusion with English ''hope'' has given the term an additional meaning of "hopeless venture".<ref>{{cite OED1|forlorn hope, n.|year=1897}}</ref>
==Other languages==
{{+rs|date=March 2016}}


Sometimes imaginative stories are created to account for the link between a borrowed word and its popularly assumed sources. The names of the ''[[serviceberry]]'', ''service tree'', and related plants, for instance, come from the Latin name {{lang|la|[[sorbus]]}}. The plants were called {{lang|ang|syrfe}} in Old English, which eventually became ''service''.<ref>{{cite OED1|serve, n1|year=1912}}</ref> Fanciful stories suggest that the name comes from the fact that the trees bloom in spring, a time when circuit-riding preachers resume church services or when funeral services are carried out for people who died during the winter.<ref>{{cite book|last=Small|first=Ernest|title=North American Cornucopia: Top 100 Indigenous Food Plants|year=2013|publisher=CRC Press|isbn=978-1-4665-8594-2|page=597}}</ref>
The French verb ''savoir'' "to know" was formerly spelled ''sçavoir'' on the false belief it was derived from Latin ''scire'' "to know". In fact it comes from ''sapere'' "to be wise".


A seemingly plausible but no less speculative etymology accounts for the form of ''[[Welsh rarebit]]'', a dish made of cheese and toasted bread. The earliest known reference to the dish in 1725 called it ''Welsh rabbit''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Byrom|first=John|title=The Private Journal and Literary Remains of John Byrom|url=https://archive.org/details/privatejournalli1132manc|year=1854|publisher=Chetham society|page=[https://archive.org/details/privatejournalli1132manc/page/108 108]}}</ref> The origin of that name is unknown, but presumably humorous, since the dish contains no rabbit. In 1785 [[Francis Grose]] suggested in ''A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue'' that the dish is "a Welch rare bit",<ref>{{cite book|last=Grose|first=Francis|title=A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue|year=1785|publisher=S. Hooper|page=133|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RyVKAAAAMAAJ&pg=133}}</ref> though the word ''rarebit'' was not common prior to Grose's dictionary. Both versions of the name are in current use; individuals sometimes express strong opinions concerning which version is correct.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Welsh rabbit, Welsh rarebit|encyclopedia=Merriam Webster's Dictionary of English Usage|page=952|year=1994|isbn=978-0-87779-132-4}}</ref>
The Italian word ''liocorno'' "unicorn" is a folk etymology, based on ''lione'' (mod. ''leone'') "lion", of older ''lunicorno'' (13th century), itself due to the fusion of ''il'' "the" + ''unicorno''. Similarly, the medieval byform ''alicorno'' (14th century) was from a similar fusion (''al'' "to the" + ''liocorno'').


=== Obsolete forms ===
Medieval Latin ''widerdonum'' (Old French ''guerdon'') was an alteration, due to confusion with Latin ''donum'' "gift", of [[Old High German]] ''widarlōn'' "reward, pay-back".
When a word or other form becomes obsolete, words or phrases containing the obsolete portion may be reanalyzed and changed.


Some [[compound word]]s from [[Old English]] were reanalyzed in Middle or Modern English when one of the constituent words fell out of use. Examples include ''[[wikt:bridegroom|bridegroom]]'' from Old English {{lang|ang|[[wikt:brydguma|brydguma]]}} {{gloss|bride-man}}. The word ''[[wikt:gome|gome]]'' {{gloss|man}} from Old English {{lang|ang|[[wikt:guma|guma]]}} fell out of use during the sixteenth century and the compound was eventually reanalyzed with the Modern English word ''[[wikt:groom|groom]]'' {{gloss|male servant}}.<ref>{{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Groom}}</ref> A similar reanalysis caused ''[[wikt:sandblind|sandblind]]'', from Old English {{lang|ang|sāmblind}} {{gloss|half-blind}} with a once-common prefix {{lang|ang|sām-}} {{gloss|semi-}}, to be respelled as though it is related to ''sand''. The word ''island'' derives from Old English {{lang|ang|igland}}. The modern spelling with the letter ''s'' is the result of comparison with the synonym ''[[wikt:isle|isle]]'' from Old French and ultimately as a [[Latinism|Latinist]] borrowing of {{lang|la|insula}}, though the Old French and Old English words are not historically related.<ref>{{cite dictionary|last=Wedgwood|first=Hensleigh|title=A Dictionary of English Etymology: E–P|year=1862|publisher=Trübner|page=273}}</ref> In a similar way, the spelling of ''[[wikt:wormwood|wormwood]]'' was likely affected by comparison with ''wood''.<ref>{{OEtymD|wormwood|access-date=2017-01-05}}</ref><ref name="Smythe Palmer">{{cite book|last=Smythe Palmer|first=Abram|title=Folk-etymology: A Dictionary of Verbal Corruptions Or Words Perverted in Form Or Meaning, by False Derivation Or Mistaken Analogy|year=1882|publisher=Johnson Reprint}}</ref>{{rp|449}}
Medieval Latin has a word, ''bachelarius'' ([[Bachelor#Etymology and historical meanings|bachelor]]), of uncertain origin, referring to a junior knight, and by extension to the holder of a university degree inferior to master or doctor. This was later re-spelled ''baccalaureus'' to reflect a false derivation from ''bacca laurea'' "laurel berry", alluding to the possible laurel crown of a poet or conqueror.


The phrase ''[[wikt:curry favor|curry favour]]'', meaning to flatter, comes from Middle English {{lang|enm|curry favel}} {{gloss|[[horse grooming|groom]] a [[chestnut horse]]}}. This was an [[allusion]] to a fourteenth-century French morality poem, ''[[Roman de Fauvel]]'', about a chestnut-coloured horse who corrupts men through duplicity. The phrase was reanalyzed in early Modern English by comparison to ''favour'' as early as 1510.<ref>{{cite web|last=Martin|first=Gary|year=2017|title=The meaning and origin of the expression: 'Curry favour'|work=Phrase Finder|url=http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/curry-favour.html}}</ref>
In Southern Italy in the Greek period there was a city ''Maloeis'' (gen. ''Maloentos''), meaning "fruitful". This was rendered in Latin as ''Maleventum'', "ill come" or "ill wind", and renamed [[Benevento|Beneventum]], "welcome" or "good wind", after the Roman conquest.


Words need not completely disappear before their compounds are reanalyzed. The word ''[[wikt:shamefaced|shamefaced]]'' was originally ''[[wikt:shamefast|shamefast]]''. The original meaning of ''fast'' 'fixed in place' still exists, as in the compounded words ''steadfast'' and ''colorfast'', but by itself mainly in frozen expressions such as ''stuck fast'', ''hold fast'', and ''[[wikt:play fast and loose|play fast and loose]]''.{{citation needed|date=January 2017}} The songbird ''[[wheatear]]'' or ''white-ear'' is a back-formation from Middle English {{lang|enm|whit-ers}} {{gloss|white arse}}, referring to the prominent white rump found in most species.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=White-ear|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/white%E2%80%93ear |encyclopedia=Merriam Webster Online|access-date=5 January 2017}}</ref> Although both ''white'' and ''arse'' are common in Modern English, the folk etymology may be [[euphemism]].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Wheatear |url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/wheatear |encyclopedia=Merriam Webster Online |access-date=13 May 2010}}</ref>
The [[Dutch language|Dutch]] word for "[[hammock]]" is ''hangmat'', "hanging mat", folk-etymologized from Spanish ''hamaca''. A similar story applies to [[Swedish language|Swedish]] ''hängmatta'' and [[German language|German]] ''Hängematte''.


Reanalysis of archaic or obsolete forms can lead to changes in meaning as well. The original meaning of ''[[hangnail]]'' referred to a [[Corn (medicine)|corn]] on the foot.<ref name="MW-hangnail">{{cite encyclopedia |title=hangnail|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hangnail |encyclopedia=Merriam Webster Online|access-date=5 January 2017}}</ref> The word comes from Old English {{lang|ang|[[wikt:ang-|ang-]]}} + {{lang|ang|[[wikt:nægel|nægel]]}} {{gloss|anguished nail, compressed spike}}, but the spelling and pronunciation were affected by folk etymology in the seventeenth century or earlier.<ref>{{OEtymD|hangnail|access-date=2017-01-05}}</ref> Thereafter, the word came to be used for a tag of skin or torn [[cuticle]] near a [[fingernail]] or toenail.<ref name="MW-hangnail" />
An example from [[Persian language|Persian]] is the word [[shatranj]] (chess), which is derived from the [[Sanskrit]] [[chaturanga]] (2nd century BCE), and after losing the "u" to [[Syncope (phonetics)|syncope]], becomes ''chatrang'' in [[Middle Persian]] (6th century CE). Today it is sometimes factorized as ''shat'' (hundred) + ''ranj'' (worry / mood), or "a hundred worries" - which appears quite a plausible etymology.{{citation needed|reason=is this analysis the reason for the segmental change, or is that just passage through Arabic?|date=October 2015}}


== Other languages ==
The [[Finnish language|Finnish]] compound word for "jealous" ''mustasukkainen'' literally means "black-socked" (''musta'' "black" and ''sukka'' "sock"). However, the word is a case of a misunderstood loan translation from [[Swedish language|Swedish]] ''svartsjuk'' "black-sick". The Finnish word ''sukka'' fit with a close phonological equivalent to the Swedish ''sjuk''
<ref>http://kirlah-kielet.blogspot.com/2008_05_01_archive.html</ref>


Several words in [[Medieval Latin]] were subject to folk etymology. For example, the word {{lang|la|widerdonum}} meaning 'reward' was borrowed from [[Old High German]] {{lang|goh|widarlōn}} {{gloss|repayment of a loan}}. The ''l{{nbsp}}→{{nbsp}}d'' alteration is due to confusion with Latin {{lang|la|donum}} {{gloss|gift}}.<ref>{{Cite OED1 |guerdon|year=1900}}</ref><ref name="Smythe Palmer" />{{rp|157}} Similarly, the word {{lang|la|baceler}} or {{lang|la|bacheler}} (related to modern English [[Bachelor#Etymology and historical meanings|''bachelor'']]) referred to a junior knight. It is attested from the eleventh century, though its ultimate origin is uncertain. By the late Middle Ages its meaning was extended to the holder of a university degree inferior to master or doctor. This was later re-spelled {{lang|la|baccalaureus}}, probably reflecting a false derivation from {{lang|la|bacca laurea}} {{gloss|laurel berry}}, alluding to the possible laurel crown of a poet or conqueror.<ref>{{cite book|last=Brachet|first=Auguste|title=An Etymological Dictionary of the French Language: Crowned by the French Academy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TvENAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA354|year=1882|publisher=Clarendon Press|pages=46–47}}</ref><ref name="Smythe Palmer" />{{rp|17–18}}
''[[Names of Istanbul#Islambol|Islambol]]'' is one of the names of [[Istanbul]] used after the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] conquest of 1453.


In the fourteenth or fifteenth century, French scholars began to spell the verb {{lang|fr|savoir}} {{gloss|to know}} as {{lang|fr|sçavoir}} on the false belief it was derived from Latin {{lang|la|scire}} {{gloss|to know}}. In fact it comes from {{lang|la|sapere}} {{gloss|to be wise}}.<ref>{{cite book|last=Singleton|first=David|title=Language and the Lexicon: An Introduction|year=2016|location=London|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-83594-3|page=141}}</ref>
==Acceptance of resulting forms==
{{+rs|date=March 2016}}
When a word changes in form or meaning owing to folk etymology, there is typically resistance to the change on the part of those who are aware of the true etymology. Many words altered through folk etymology survive beyond such resistance however, to the point where they entirely replace the original form in the language. ''Chaise lounge'' and ''Welsh rarebit'' are still often disparaged, for example, but ''shamefaced'' and ''buttonhole'' as a verb are universally accepted (see ''[[Prescription and description]]'') and, for example, listed in the 1913 Oxford English Dictionary, with citations from long before.


The Italian word {{lang|it|liocorno}}, meaning 'unicorn' derives from 13th-century ''lunicorno'' (''lo'' 'the' + ''unicorno'' 'unicorn'). Folk etymology based on ''lione'' 'lion' altered the spelling and pronunciation. Dialectal ''liofante'' 'elephant' was likewise altered from ''elefante'' by association with ''lione''.<ref name="Smythe Palmer" />{{rp|486}}
==See also==


The [[Dutch language|Dutch]] word for '[[hammock]]' is {{lang|nl|hangmat}}. It was borrowed from Spanish {{lang|es|hamaca}} (ultimately from [[Arawak language|Arawak]] {{lang|arw|amàca}}) and altered by comparison with {{lang|nl|hangen}} and {{lang|nl|mat}} {{gloss|hanging mat}}. German {{lang|de|Hängematte}} shares this folk etymology.<ref>{{cite web|title=Hängematte|work=Wörterbuch Deutsch|url=http://en.worterbuchdeutsch.com/de/hangematte |date=October 2016|access-date=2017-01-31}}</ref>
*[[Backronym]]
*[[Back-formation]]
*[[Chinese word for "crisis"]]
*[[Corruption (linguistics)]]
*[[Eggcorn]]
*[[Expressive loan]]
*[[False etymology]]
*[[Hobson-Jobson]]
*[[Hypercorrection]]
*[[Hyperforeignism]]
*[[Johannes Goropius Becanus]]
*[[Okay]]
*[[Phono-semantic matching]]
*[[Pseudoscientific language comparison]]
*[[Slang dictionary]]
* [[False friend]]
* [[Semantic change]]
* [[Etymological fallacy]]


''[[Names of Istanbul#Islambol|Islambol]]'', a folk etymology meaning 'Islam abounding', is one of the names of [[Istanbul]] used after the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] conquest of 1453.<ref>{{cite book|author=Necdet Sakaoğlu|title=Dünden bugüne İstanbul ansiklopedisi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t51PAQAAMAAJ|year=1993|publisher=Kültür Bakanlığı|language=tr|isbn=978-975-7306-04-7|pages=253–255|chapter=İstanbul'un adları}}</ref>
==Notes==
{{reflist}}


An example from [[Persian language|Persian]] is the word {{lang|fa|شطرنج}} {{transl|fa|[[shatranj]]}} 'chess', which is derived from the [[Sanskrit]] {{lang|sa|चतुरङ्ग}} {{transl|sa|[[chaturanga|chatur-anga]]}} ("four-army [game]"; 2nd century BCE), and after losing the ''u'' to [[Syncope (phonetics)|syncope]], became {{lang|pal-Arab|چترنگ}} {{transl|pal|chatrang}} in [[Middle Persian]] (6th century CE). Today it is sometimes factorized as {{transl|fa|sad}} {{gloss|hundred}} + {{transl|fa|ranj}} {{gloss|worry, mood}}, or {{gloss|a hundred worries}}.<ref name="BurnellYule1996">{{cite book|author1=A. C. Burnell|author2=Henry Yule|title=Hobson-Jobson: Glossary of Colloquial Anglo-Indian Words And Phrases|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mnl0DwAAQBAJ&q=Shatranj&pg=PA779|date=11 January 1996|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-136-60331-0|page=779}}</ref>
==References==
* [[Anatoly Liberman]] (2005). ''Word Origins ... and How We Know Them: Etymology for Everyone''. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516147-2.
* [[Adrian Room]] (1986). ''Dictionary of True Etymologies''. Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 0-7102-0340-3.
* [[David Wilton]] (2004). ''Word Myths: Debunking Linguistic Urban Legends''. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-517284-1.
* [[Ghil'ad Zuckermann]] (2003). ''Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew''. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan. (Palgrave Studies in Language History and Language Change, Series editor: Charles Jones). ISBN 1-4039-1723-X.


Some Indonesian [[feminist]]s discourage usage of the term ''wanita'' ('woman') and replacing it with ''perempuan'', since ''wanita'' itself has [[misogynistic]] roots. First, in [[Javanese language|Javanese]], ''wanita'' is a portmanteau of ''wani ditata'' (dare to be controlled), also, ''wanita'' is taken from [[Sanskrit]] {{lang|sa|वनिता}} {{transl|sa|vanitā}} (someone desired by men).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Parhani |first1=Siti |title=Antara Wanita dan Perempuan, Apa Bedanya? |url=https://magdalene.co/story/antara-wanita-dan-perempuan-apa-bedanya/ |website=Magdalene |access-date=2 May 2024 |date=6 January 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Swaragita |first1=Gisela |title=Defining 'woman': Dictionary entry fans flames of sexist furor in Indonesia - Politics |url=https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2021/02/11/indonesias-language-agency-fans-flames-of-sexist-furor-over-perempuan-dictionary-entry.html |website=The Jakarta Post |access-date=2 May 2024 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rhani |first1=Gloria Kristy |title=Gambaran Perempuan Karir Dalam Program "News For Women" SBO TV |journal=Commonline UNAIR |date=1 April 2014 |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=137–151 |url=https://journal.unair.ac.id/filerPDF/comm0b09f80fe1full.pdf |access-date=2 May 2024}}</ref>
==External links==
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=e0wHAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA116&lpg=PA116&dq=%22folk+etymology%22+%22false+etymology%22&source=bl&ots=3Lnhmf8-Hk&sig=PMoBVPcQ_EyNOktNJHVKyIY-4zk&hl=en&ei=zkI0SujvKcPalAfklNisCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4#PPP9,M1 Folk etymologies] (a collection of folk etymologies)
* Richard Lederer, [http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0203/lederer022003.asp ''Spook Etymology on the Internet'']
* [http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/fallacy.html Popular fallacies in the attribution of phrase origins]
* [http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=folk+etymology&searchmode=none&p=0 EtymologyOnLine - both true and folk etymologies- here mainly examples of popular etymologies]


In Turkey, the political [[Democrat Party (Turkey, current)|Democrat Party]] changed its logo in 2007 to a white horse in front of a red background because many voters folk-etymologized its Turkish name {{lang|tr|Demokrat}} as {{lang|tr|demir kırat}} {{gloss|iron white-horse}}.<ref>{{cite book|first=Sam|last=Kaplan|year=2006|title=The Pedagogical State|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=0-8047-5433-0|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lHPuoNJqaUAC&q=demir&pg=PA172|page=172}}</ref>
{{EB1911}}


== See also ==
{{Authority control}}
{{div col|colwidth=25em}}
* [[Backronym]]
* [[Chinese word for "crisis"]]
* [[Eggcorn]]
* [[Etymological fallacy]]
* [[Expressive loan]]
* [[False etymology]]
* [[False friend]]
* [[Folk linguistics]]
* [[Hobson-Jobson]]
* [[Hypercorrection]]
* [[Hyperforeignism]]
* [[Johannes Goropius Becanus]]
* [[Nirukta]]
* [[Okay]]
* [[Phono-semantic matching]]
* [[Pseudoscientific language comparison]]
* [[Semantic change]]
* [[Slang dictionary]]
* [[Wiktionary:Category:Back-formations by language|Wiktionary list of back-formations]]
* [[Wiktionary:Category:Rebracketings by language|Wiktionary list of rebracketings]]
{{div col end}}


== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}

== Further reading ==
* {{cite book |author-link=Jan Harold Brunvand |last=Brunvand |first=Jan Harold |title=Encyclopedia of Urban Legends, Volume 1 |date=2012 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |location=Santa Barbara, Calif. |isbn=978-1-59-884720-8 |pages=242–44 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9xOb-19lXx8C&q=%22folk+etymologies%22}}
* [[Anatoly Liberman]] (2005). ''Word Origins ... and How We Know Them: Etymology for Everyone''. Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-19-516147-2}}.
* [[Adrian Room]] (1986). ''Dictionary of True Etymologies''. Routledge & Kegan Paul. {{ISBN|0-7102-0340-3}}.
* [[David Wilton]] (2004). ''Word Myths: Debunking Linguistic Urban Legends''. Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|0-19-517284-1}}.

{{Folklore genres}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:False Etymology}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:False Etymology}}
[[Category:Etymology]]
[[Category:Etymology]]
[[Category:Language comparison]]
[[Category:Comparative linguistics]]
[[Category:Linguistics]]
[[Category:Linguistics]]
[[Category:Folklore]]
[[Category:Folklore]]
[[Category:Linguistic error]]
[[Category:Linguistic error]]
[[Category:Linguistic purism]]
[[Category:Semantic relations]]

Latest revision as of 05:30, 22 November 2024

Folk etymology – also known as (generative) popular etymology,[1] analogical reformation, (morphological) reanalysis and etymological reinterpretation[2] – is a change in a word or phrase resulting from the replacement of an unfamiliar form by a more familiar one through popular usage.[3][4][5] The form or the meaning of an archaic, foreign, or otherwise unfamiliar word is reinterpreted as resembling more familiar words or morphemes.

The term folk etymology is a loan translation from German Volksetymologie, coined by Ernst Förstemann in 1852.[6] Folk etymology is a productive process in historical linguistics, language change, and social interaction.[7] Reanalysis of a word's history or original form can affect its spelling, pronunciation, or meaning. This is frequently seen in relation to loanwords or words that have become archaic or obsolete.

Folk/popular etymology may also refer to a popular false belief about the etymology of a word or phrase that does not lead to a change in the form or meaning. To disambiguate the usage of the term "folk/popular etymology", Ghil'ad Zuckermann proposes a clear-cut distinction between the derivational-only popular etymology (DOPE) and the generative popular etymology (GPE): the DOPE refers to a popular false etymology involving no neologization, and the GPE refers to neologization generated by a popular false etymology.[1]

Examples of words created or changed through folk etymology include the English dialectal form sparrowgrass, originally from Greek ἀσπάραγος ("asparagus") remade by analogy to the more familiar words sparrow and grass.[8] When the alteration of an unfamiliar word is limited to a single person, it is known as an eggcorn.

Productive force

[edit]

The technical term "folk etymology" refers to a change in the form of a word caused by erroneous popular suppositions about its etymology. Until the academic development of comparative linguistics and description of laws underlying sound changes, the derivation of a word was mostly guess-work. Speculation about the original form of words in turn feeds back into the development of the word and thus becomes a part of a new etymology.[9]

Believing a word to have a certain origin, people begin to pronounce, spell, or otherwise use the word in a manner appropriate to that perceived origin. This popular etymologizing has had a powerful influence on the forms which words take. Examples in English include crayfish or crawfish, which are not historically related to fish but come from Middle English crevis, cognate with French écrevisse. Likewise chaise lounge, from the original French chaise longue ("long chair"), has come to be associated with the word lounge.[10]

[edit]

Other types of language change caused by reanalysis of the structure of a word include rebracketing and back-formation.

In rebracketing, users of the language change, misinterpret, or reinterpret the location of a boundary between words or morphemes. For example, the Old French word orenge 'orange tree' comes from Arabic النَّرَنْج an-naranj 'the orange tree', with the initial ⟨n⟩ of naranj understood as part of the article.[11] Rebracketing in the opposite direction saw the Middle English a napron become an apron.[12]

In back-formation, a new word is created by removing elements from an existing word that are interpreted as affixes. For example, Italian pronuncia 'pronunciation, accent' is derived from the verb pronunciare 'to pronounce, to utter' and English edit derives from editor.[13] Some cases of back-formation are based on folk etymology.

Examples in English

[edit]

In linguistic change caused by folk etymology, the form of a word changes so that it better matches its popular rationalisation. Typically this happens either to unanalysable foreign words or to compounds where the word underlying one part of the compound becomes obsolete.

Loanwords

[edit]

There are many examples of words borrowed from foreign languages, and subsequently changed by folk etymology.

The spelling of many borrowed words reflects folk etymology. For example, andiron borrowed from Old French was variously spelled aundyre or aundiren in Middle English, but was altered by association with iron.[14] Other Old French loans altered in a similar manner include belfry (from berfrey) by association with bell, female (from femelle) by male, and penthouse (from apentis) by house.[15] The variant spelling of licorice as liquorice comes from the supposition that it has something to do with liquid.[16] Anglo-Norman licoris (influenced by licor 'liquor') and Late Latin liquirītia were respelled for similar reasons, though the ultimate origin of all three is Ancient Greek γλυκύρριζα glucúrrhiza 'sweet root'.[17]

Reanalysis of loan words can affect their spelling, pronunciation, or meaning. The word cockroach, for example, was borrowed from Spanish cucaracha but was assimilated to the existing English words cock and roach.[18] The phrase forlorn hope originally meant "storming party, body of skirmishers"[19] from Dutch verloren hoop "lost troop". But confusion with English hope has given the term an additional meaning of "hopeless venture".[20]

Sometimes imaginative stories are created to account for the link between a borrowed word and its popularly assumed sources. The names of the serviceberry, service tree, and related plants, for instance, come from the Latin name sorbus. The plants were called syrfe in Old English, which eventually became service.[21] Fanciful stories suggest that the name comes from the fact that the trees bloom in spring, a time when circuit-riding preachers resume church services or when funeral services are carried out for people who died during the winter.[22]

A seemingly plausible but no less speculative etymology accounts for the form of Welsh rarebit, a dish made of cheese and toasted bread. The earliest known reference to the dish in 1725 called it Welsh rabbit.[23] The origin of that name is unknown, but presumably humorous, since the dish contains no rabbit. In 1785 Francis Grose suggested in A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue that the dish is "a Welch rare bit",[24] though the word rarebit was not common prior to Grose's dictionary. Both versions of the name are in current use; individuals sometimes express strong opinions concerning which version is correct.[25]

Obsolete forms

[edit]

When a word or other form becomes obsolete, words or phrases containing the obsolete portion may be reanalyzed and changed.

Some compound words from Old English were reanalyzed in Middle or Modern English when one of the constituent words fell out of use. Examples include bridegroom from Old English brydguma 'bride-man'. The word gome 'man' from Old English guma fell out of use during the sixteenth century and the compound was eventually reanalyzed with the Modern English word groom 'male servant'.[26] A similar reanalysis caused sandblind, from Old English sāmblind 'half-blind' with a once-common prefix sām- 'semi-', to be respelled as though it is related to sand. The word island derives from Old English igland. The modern spelling with the letter s is the result of comparison with the synonym isle from Old French and ultimately as a Latinist borrowing of insula, though the Old French and Old English words are not historically related.[27] In a similar way, the spelling of wormwood was likely affected by comparison with wood.[28][29]: 449 

The phrase curry favour, meaning to flatter, comes from Middle English curry favel 'groom a chestnut horse'. This was an allusion to a fourteenth-century French morality poem, Roman de Fauvel, about a chestnut-coloured horse who corrupts men through duplicity. The phrase was reanalyzed in early Modern English by comparison to favour as early as 1510.[30]

Words need not completely disappear before their compounds are reanalyzed. The word shamefaced was originally shamefast. The original meaning of fast 'fixed in place' still exists, as in the compounded words steadfast and colorfast, but by itself mainly in frozen expressions such as stuck fast, hold fast, and play fast and loose.[citation needed] The songbird wheatear or white-ear is a back-formation from Middle English whit-ers 'white arse', referring to the prominent white rump found in most species.[31] Although both white and arse are common in Modern English, the folk etymology may be euphemism.[32]

Reanalysis of archaic or obsolete forms can lead to changes in meaning as well. The original meaning of hangnail referred to a corn on the foot.[33] The word comes from Old English ang- + nægel 'anguished nail, compressed spike', but the spelling and pronunciation were affected by folk etymology in the seventeenth century or earlier.[34] Thereafter, the word came to be used for a tag of skin or torn cuticle near a fingernail or toenail.[33]

Other languages

[edit]

Several words in Medieval Latin were subject to folk etymology. For example, the word widerdonum meaning 'reward' was borrowed from Old High German widarlōn 'repayment of a loan'. The l  d alteration is due to confusion with Latin donum 'gift'.[35][29]: 157  Similarly, the word baceler or bacheler (related to modern English bachelor) referred to a junior knight. It is attested from the eleventh century, though its ultimate origin is uncertain. By the late Middle Ages its meaning was extended to the holder of a university degree inferior to master or doctor. This was later re-spelled baccalaureus, probably reflecting a false derivation from bacca laurea 'laurel berry', alluding to the possible laurel crown of a poet or conqueror.[36][29]: 17–18 

In the fourteenth or fifteenth century, French scholars began to spell the verb savoir 'to know' as sçavoir on the false belief it was derived from Latin scire 'to know'. In fact it comes from sapere 'to be wise'.[37]

The Italian word liocorno, meaning 'unicorn' derives from 13th-century lunicorno (lo 'the' + unicorno 'unicorn'). Folk etymology based on lione 'lion' altered the spelling and pronunciation. Dialectal liofante 'elephant' was likewise altered from elefante by association with lione.[29]: 486 

The Dutch word for 'hammock' is hangmat. It was borrowed from Spanish hamaca (ultimately from Arawak amàca) and altered by comparison with hangen and mat 'hanging mat'. German Hängematte shares this folk etymology.[38]

Islambol, a folk etymology meaning 'Islam abounding', is one of the names of Istanbul used after the Ottoman conquest of 1453.[39]

An example from Persian is the word شطرنج shatranj 'chess', which is derived from the Sanskrit चतुरङ्ग chatur-anga ("four-army [game]"; 2nd century BCE), and after losing the u to syncope, became چترنگ chatrang in Middle Persian (6th century CE). Today it is sometimes factorized as sad 'hundred' + ranj 'worry, mood', or 'a hundred worries'.[40]

Some Indonesian feminists discourage usage of the term wanita ('woman') and replacing it with perempuan, since wanita itself has misogynistic roots. First, in Javanese, wanita is a portmanteau of wani ditata (dare to be controlled), also, wanita is taken from Sanskrit वनिता vanitā (someone desired by men).[41][42][43]

In Turkey, the political Democrat Party changed its logo in 2007 to a white horse in front of a red background because many voters folk-etymologized its Turkish name Demokrat as demir kırat 'iron white-horse'.[44]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2003). Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1403917232.
  2. ^ Cienkowski, Witold (January 1969). "The initial stimuli in the processes of etymological reinterpretation(so-called folk etymology)". Scando-Slavica. 15 (1): 237–245. doi:10.1080/00806766908600524. ISSN 0080-6765.
  3. ^ "folk-etymology". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1933.
  4. ^ Sihler, Andrew (2000). Language History: An introduction. John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-8546-2.
  5. ^ Trask, Robert Lawrence (2000). The Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1-57958-218-0.
  6. ^ Förstemann, Ernst (1852). "Ueber Deutsche volksetymologie". In Adalbert Kuhn (ed.). Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete des Deutschen, Griechischen und Lateinischen. F. Dümmler.
  7. ^ See, e.g. Ghil'ad Zuckermann, "'Etymythological Othering' and the Power of 'Lexical Engineering' in Judaism, Islam and Christianity. A Socio-Philo(sopho)logical Perspective", in Explorations in the Sociology of Language and Religion (2006), ed. by Tope Omoniyi & Joshua A. Fishman, Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 237–258.
  8. ^ Anttila, Raimo (1989). Historical and Comparative Linguistics. John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-3556-2.
  9. ^  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Etymology". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 864–865.
  10. ^ Pyles, Thomas; Algeo, John (1993). The Origins and Development of the English Language (4th ed.). New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 0030970547.
  11. ^ "orange n.¹ and adj.¹". Oxford English Dictionary online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2013. doi:10.1093/OED/1138553349. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  12. ^ "apron, n.". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. March 2024. doi:10.1093/OED/6544240544.
  13. ^ Crystal, David (2011). Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-4443-5675-5.
  14. ^ "andiron, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1884.
  15. ^ "penthouse | Etymology, origin and meaning of penthouse by etymonline". www.etymonline.com. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  16. ^ Barnhart, Robert K. (1988). The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology. H.W. Wilson. p. 593. ISBN 978-0-8242-0745-8. The development of Late Latin liquiritia was in part influenced by Latin liquēre 'to flow', in reference to the process of treating the root to obtain its extract.
  17. ^ "liquorice licorice, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1903.
  18. ^ "cockroach, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1891.
  19. ^ Brown, Lesley, ed. (2002). Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. 1: A–M (5th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 1600.
  20. ^ "forlorn hope, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1897.
  21. ^ "serve, n1". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1912.
  22. ^ Small, Ernest (2013). North American Cornucopia: Top 100 Indigenous Food Plants. CRC Press. p. 597. ISBN 978-1-4665-8594-2.
  23. ^ Byrom, John (1854). The Private Journal and Literary Remains of John Byrom. Chetham society. p. 108.
  24. ^ Grose, Francis (1785). A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue. S. Hooper. p. 133.
  25. ^ "Welsh rabbit, Welsh rarebit". Merriam Webster's Dictionary of English Usage. 1994. p. 952. ISBN 978-0-87779-132-4.
  26. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Groom" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  27. ^ Wedgwood, Hensleigh (1862). A Dictionary of English Etymology: E–P. Trübner. p. 273.
  28. ^ Harper, Douglas. "wormwood". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2017-01-05.
  29. ^ a b c d Smythe Palmer, Abram (1882). Folk-etymology: A Dictionary of Verbal Corruptions Or Words Perverted in Form Or Meaning, by False Derivation Or Mistaken Analogy. Johnson Reprint.
  30. ^ Martin, Gary (2017). "The meaning and origin of the expression: 'Curry favour'". Phrase Finder.
  31. ^ "White-ear". Merriam Webster Online. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  32. ^ "Wheatear". Merriam Webster Online. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
  33. ^ a b "hangnail". Merriam Webster Online. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  34. ^ Harper, Douglas. "hangnail". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2017-01-05.
  35. ^ "guerdon". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1900.
  36. ^ Brachet, Auguste (1882). An Etymological Dictionary of the French Language: Crowned by the French Academy. Clarendon Press. pp. 46–47.
  37. ^ Singleton, David (2016). Language and the Lexicon: An Introduction. London: Routledge. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-317-83594-3.
  38. ^ "Hängematte". Wörterbuch Deutsch. October 2016. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
  39. ^ Necdet Sakaoğlu (1993). "İstanbul'un adları". Dünden bugüne İstanbul ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Kültür Bakanlığı. pp. 253–255. ISBN 978-975-7306-04-7.
  40. ^ A. C. Burnell; Henry Yule (11 January 1996). Hobson-Jobson: Glossary of Colloquial Anglo-Indian Words And Phrases. Taylor & Francis. p. 779. ISBN 978-1-136-60331-0.
  41. ^ Parhani, Siti (6 January 2021). "Antara Wanita dan Perempuan, Apa Bedanya?". Magdalene. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  42. ^ Swaragita, Gisela. "Defining 'woman': Dictionary entry fans flames of sexist furor in Indonesia - Politics". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  43. ^ Rhani, Gloria Kristy (1 April 2014). "Gambaran Perempuan Karir Dalam Program "News For Women" SBO TV" (PDF). Commonline UNAIR. 3 (1): 137–151. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  44. ^ Kaplan, Sam (2006). The Pedagogical State. Stanford University Press. p. 172. ISBN 0-8047-5433-0.

Further reading

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