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Etymology and surprising origins of English words

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Learn about etymology, the study of word origins and derivations in historical linguistics, and the influence of a ProtoIndoeuropean (PIE) language in the formation of English and other modern languages in Europe, Russia, and Asia. Highlighted is how etymologists have come up with a theoretical model of the ProtoIndoeuropean language; how Modern English was influenced by the ProtoGermanic and Latin languages, both descendants of PIE; and how English continues to borrow words from other languages.

TO CLARIFY THE ORIGIN OF "WAR"
PIE *wers "to confuse, mix up" ► Frankish *werra ► Old North French "werre (Old French "guerre," meaning dispute, war) ► late Old English wyrre, werre "largescale military conflict." Cognates suggest the original sense was "to bring into confusion." There's much confusion in the history of the word in European languages because they borrowed it either from the Germanic or from the Latin root. Etymological trees can have many twisted and intersecting branches (which makes me glad I'm not an etymologist:)

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RELATED LINKS
Scientific American (2018). New Evidence Fuels Debate over the Origin of Modern Languages (web article):
https://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...

Business Insider (2015). "This animated map shows how European languages evolved" (web article and animated map): http://www.businessinsider.com/animat...
*Note: There are disagreements regarding where PIE originated and exactly how it spread.

Dictionary.com. "What Percentage of English Words are Derived from Latin?" (web article): http://dictionary.com/e/wordorigins

Kutsui (Wikipedia User) "Countries where an IndoEuropean language is: a primary de facto national or official language a secondary official language officially recognized" (map): https://goo.gl/P8nxGV

Wikipedia. "Cot–caught merger" (web article about how the distinction in the vowel sounds of "cot" and "caught" is being lost in North American English): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cot%E2%...

Slate. "Languages that have contributed to English vocabulary over time" (web article) http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_va...

Ted.com. "20 words that once meant something very different" (web article illustrating semantic change): http://ideas.ted.com/20wordsthaton...

Soho Press. "The ProtoIndoEuropean family" (web article briefly explaining how etymologists built the "family tree for IndoEuropean;" includes a chart showing the modern languages descending from ProtoIndoeuropean): https://sohopress.com/theprotoindo...

Wikipedia. "Lists of English words by country or language of origin" (web page): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_o...

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#language #linguistics #etymology

posted by ozakonili15