• nightlily@leminal.space
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    1 hour ago

    Either „tea“ and „cha/chai“ exist in some form virtually every language that has encountered tea, and the distinction between which was adopted generally has to do with whether it was first traded with the country by land (cha) from China or by sea (tea) from Malaysia.

  • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    In Russian the days of the week are mostly numbers, e.g. Tuesday is the second day, so Tuesday is Вторник, which comes from второй (second) and the suffix -ник for day. But Monday is not перник as you would expect (первых + ник), instead Monday is Понедельник. This is short for после (after) не (not) делать (doing) -ник (day), i.e the day after not doing anything (Sunday).

    In Finnish a tietosanakirja is an encyclopedia, this is a composed word made from tieto (knowledge) and sanakirja (Dictionary). But also sanakirja is a composed word made out from sana (word) and kirja (book). So an encyclopedia is a book of words of knowledge.

  • Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk
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    7 hours ago

    ‘Bully’ used to mean good friend. There’s a scene in Shakespeare (who else?) where he talks about someone sending his bully boys to teach someone a lesson, meaning he sent his close friends. But, over time, people took it to mean his thuggish friends and so the word’s meaning shifted.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    “Son of a gun” is from when sailing ships would come into port. The sex workers would row out to them and have sex with an entire gun crew.

    When the kid was born they didn’t know who the father was so he was a “son of a gun” aka a bastard.

  • Lushed_Lungfish@lemmy.ca
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    8 hours ago

    The term “snorkel” derives from the German word for snoring.

    Back in WW2, U-boats (and pretty much all submarines) needed to surface so that they would be able to run their diesel engines in order to charge their batteries because diesel combustion requires oxygen. One German scientist developed a way to get air without having to surface the boat. As this was a very big tactical advantage it was, obviously top secret. In order to not give away what it was, he referred to it by the sound it made i.e. that of someone snoring.

  • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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    8 hours ago

    Proto-slavic used the root “dn” (дн) for water, which explains river names such as Dnipro (Дніпро,Днепр), Danube (Дунай/Donau), Don (Дон), Dnjester (Днестр, Дністро).

    • wieson@feddit.org
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      6 hours ago

      I tried to look up if Rhein and Rhône are from the same root. It’s a theory but not proven.
      It’s from Proto-Germanic " erei" to flow.

      Mosel (Moselle) is just a diminutive of Maas (Meuse)

  • Akasazh@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Denim= De Nîmes (from the city of Nîmes)

    Jeans = Gênes , the French weird for Genoa.

    The cotton weave, indigo dyed cloth originated in Genoa, and in France the main production centre was Nîmes.

    So ‘denim jeans’ is both a tautology and a contradiction

    • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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      8 hours ago

      I heard that in Czechia and Slovakia, the word for jeans is/was “Rifle” (pronounced “reef-le”), since Rifle was the first brand of jeans imported there in the 80s.

  • pocopene@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    The “mast” in “mastodon” is the same one as in “mastectomy”.

    “The term “mastodon” comes from Greek roots: “mastos” meaning “breast” and “odon” meaning “tooth,” referring to the nipple-like projections on the mammal’s fossil molars. The name was coined by French naturalist Georges Cuvier in 1806.”

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    18 hours ago

    You might be familiar with the radio term “roger.” Per the FAA’s Pilot/Controller Glossary, it means “I have received all of your last transmission. It should not be used to answer a question requiring a yes or no answer.”

    They want to make it VERY clear that roger does not mean “yes.” So why do we use the word “roger” to mean “acknowledged”? Because Americans in World War II.

    First of all, radio was still a fairly new warfighting tool in the 1940’s. In a lot of cases, they still used Morse code tapped out by telegraphers on straight keys. Morse code was like the SMS of its day, it takes a long time to spell each letter out, so you end up with abbreviations, some of which really only make sense if you’re familiar with Morse. For example, you know the radio practice of saying “over” and “out?” In morse code, you use K (-.-) to mean “over” and KN (-.- -.) to mean “out.” There’s an entire list of “Q codes”, for example, you can tell someone to reduce their transmitter power by simply transmitting QRP (–.- .-. .–.). There’s one that means “what’s your barometric pressure?” because aviation. You’ll still sometimes hear “What’s QNH?” in aviation circles.

    Most relevantly, a reply that simply means “I have received all of your last transmission” is simply abbreviated to R (.-.).

    They also had AM voice mode radios. And now we get to talk about phonetic alphabets. We’ve all independently invented one at least once, talking to tech support on the phone and reading a serial number “One Three Four D as in Dog, Two, E as in Egg, Seven Eight one.” Because a bunch of letters sound the same when saying them out loud. You might be familiar with the modern one used by NATO, also required by the aviation world via ICAO. Starts out Alpha Bravo Charlie Delta etc. R in the modern one is Romeo. But NATO formed well after WWII.

    The phonetic alphabet used during WWII by English speaking nations went Able Baker Charlie Dog Easy Fox etc etc. Peter Queen Roger Sugar etc etc Xray Yoke Zebra.

    So we say “Roger” because in WWII the Morse code abbreviation for “received” was R and the letter R would be pronounced “Roger” on an AM transmitter, and even though the phonetic alphabet has moved on, the word remains in use with a specific definition.

    • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      I remember reading a scene where a pilot is getting orders over the radio and it went something like:

      Tower: I want you to return to base immediately!

      Pilot: Roger.

      Tower: I heard a “Roger,” but I didn’t hear a “Wilco,” now I repeat, I am ordering you to return to base!

      Pilot: Roger.

      Tower: [Explodes in radio transmitted fury]

  • rosco385@lemmy.wtf
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    14 hours ago

    The British insult “tow rag” or “toe rag”, referring to a contemptible and worthless person, is named after the nautical precusor to toilet paper:

    Back in the days of sailing ships, the sailors did not have toilet paper. What they did have were rags. Cloth rags known as “tow”. After having completed their daily evacuations, sailors would engage in ablutions using a rag. This rag was then tied to a rope and dragged behind the ship in order to clean it (or them).

    https://snowbirdofparadise.com/2020/04/02/the-tow-rag-explained/

  • Godric@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    In English, the words for many animals (chicken, cow, sheep, deer, pig) are derived from proto-germanic, while the word for their meat (poultry, beef, mutton, venison, pork) is French derived.

    Bonus: A good chunk of river names are just “River” in the local language. So many River Rivers from newcomers adopting the river names, not knowing it just means “river”

    • YiddishMcSquidish@lemmy.today
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      2 hours ago

      I just want to add that a great much of English is German and French.

      For example “question” is Germanic rooted while “interrogate” is French.

      • nightlily@leminal.space
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        1 hour ago

        If I were to be pedantic, I don’t know if it’s correct to say that much of English is German as such. Modern standard German/Hochdeutsch and English have a common ancestor but that split was a very long time ago now. You could say that the grammar is better preserved in German but you could say the same about Dutch, or English‘s closest living sibling - Frisian. „German“ has gone through a great many changes from Proto-Germanic, and still, there’s a mess of different dialects/languages from different family branches in one modern state.

        There’s probably a similar argument about the French influence (Norman wasn’t French per se but a closely related Romance language) but I don’t know enough about that.

    • dumples@piefed.social
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      8 hours ago

      The reason for the difference is from the Norman invasion when the nobility were French. So they referred to the food only not the animal in their own tongue.

    • Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk
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      8 hours ago

      The kicker is that the peasants spoke the old proto-germanic language, and the nobles spoke the shiny new French derivation. So peasants raised the beasts and the nobles ate the beasts.

  • Tudsamfa@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Admiral comes from Arabic “amīral”. “Amir” means king, prince, chief, leader, and “al” is the definite article, in English “the” (compare algebra or alchemy).

    So admiral means “leader of the”, the Arabic for “leader of the sea”, Amīr al-Baḥr, was too long to survive the whole game of telephone.

    • magz :3@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      16 hours ago

      apropos algebra, that comes from al-Jabr, which (approximately) means reunion, resetting of broken parts, or balancing, and is a shortnening of the title of the book (copy-pasted from wiktionary) al-kitāb al-muḵtaṣar fī ḥisāb al-jabr wa-l-muqābala, “The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing”. the author of this book, Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi also gave us the word “algorithm” (from al-Khwarizmi)

      • ExLisperA
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        15 hours ago

        Most of the words starting with ‘al’ in Spanish come from Arabic. I think the weirdest one is ‘ojala’ (I hope) which comes from “Inshallah”.

  • ExLisperA
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    17 hours ago

    Barbecue comes from Spanish barbacoa which comes from Taino language used in the Caribbean region. Natives there invented barbecue, the Spanish took it to the old continent and it spread from there.

    Chocolate comes from náhuatl language used by Mexica people. Xocoatl, from xoco ‘sour’ y atl ‘water’.

    Coach (as in bus) comes from Hungarian kocsi. They invented a type of horse pulled carriage which later gave the name to the coaches we know from westerns and then to busses and cars. Coche (car in Spanish) has the same etymology.

  • Drewmeister@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I don’t think anyone has mentioned “helicopter” yet. It’s not heli and copter like you might think. It’s helico like helix meaning spiral and pter like pterodactyl meaning winged.