(no subject)
Jun. 2nd, 2002 11:17 pmHere's a fun word of the day:
niddering (NID-uhr-ing) noun
A coward or wretch.
[From erroneous reading of Middle English nithing, from Old English nithing.
This form of the word originated in the 1596 text of historian William of
Malmesbury.]
"And so it goes on without ever reaching the heart of the matter, which
is that the BBC is really a state of mind. It is, as Colin Morris once
put it, the collective memory of the people who made it a great
broadcasting organisation. This idea is quite beyond the niddering
regime currently running the Corporation."
John Naughton, Inside Job on Awkward Customers Inside the BBC,
The Guardian (London), Apr 24, 1994.
"Even William the Conqueror, hated as he was by them, continued to draw
a considerable army of Anglo-Saxons to his standard, by threatening to
stigmatize those who staid at home, as nidering."
Sir Walter Scott, Ivanhoe, 1819.
Ever misspell a word in your school report that cost you a grade? Ever
make a typo in an office memo for which you paid a heavy price? Don't be
disheartened if you think you may never master the whimsies of the English
language. Take comfort in the fact that there's no universal god of
orthography who once decreed, "And ye shall spell potato as p-o-t-a-t-o."
The spelling of a word is merely something we've collectively agreed upon.
Your version of spelling might have been the right one if you were born
just at the right time and read or wrote just the right text. As we'll
see this week, there are words that were once misspelled and those
misspellings somehow stuck. All the words featured this week had their
spellings altered in the course of history because someone mis-read,
mis-printed, mis-wrote, or mis-copied and missed the "right" spelling. -Anu
niddering (NID-uhr-ing) noun
A coward or wretch.
[From erroneous reading of Middle English nithing, from Old English nithing.
This form of the word originated in the 1596 text of historian William of
Malmesbury.]
"And so it goes on without ever reaching the heart of the matter, which
is that the BBC is really a state of mind. It is, as Colin Morris once
put it, the collective memory of the people who made it a great
broadcasting organisation. This idea is quite beyond the niddering
regime currently running the Corporation."
John Naughton, Inside Job on Awkward Customers Inside the BBC,
The Guardian (London), Apr 24, 1994.
"Even William the Conqueror, hated as he was by them, continued to draw
a considerable army of Anglo-Saxons to his standard, by threatening to
stigmatize those who staid at home, as nidering."
Sir Walter Scott, Ivanhoe, 1819.
Ever misspell a word in your school report that cost you a grade? Ever
make a typo in an office memo for which you paid a heavy price? Don't be
disheartened if you think you may never master the whimsies of the English
language. Take comfort in the fact that there's no universal god of
orthography who once decreed, "And ye shall spell potato as p-o-t-a-t-o."
The spelling of a word is merely something we've collectively agreed upon.
Your version of spelling might have been the right one if you were born
just at the right time and read or wrote just the right text. As we'll
see this week, there are words that were once misspelled and those
misspellings somehow stuck. All the words featured this week had their
spellings altered in the course of history because someone mis-read,
mis-printed, mis-wrote, or mis-copied and missed the "right" spelling. -Anu