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Interesting Etymologies, P.1

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Words and their Origins
Etymology is the study of the history of words - where these words originate from and how their meanings have changed over time. Here's a few interesting ones to get you started.

Ketchup
Before there was ever tomato ketchup, there were fish sauces in eastern Asia. These fish sauces had a ketchup-like consistency. They still sell them in grocery stores today.

The word "ketchup" comes from the Malay/Indonesian word "kecap", or spelled "ketcap" by the Dutch. This word can be further derived from the Chinese ke'tsiap 茄汁. English and Dutch sailors brought the Asian styled ketchup to Europe, where many flavorings such as mushrooms, achovies and nuts were added to the basic fish sauce.

In Cantonese Chinese, "ket" means tomato and "chup" means sauce. Combined, it means tomato sauce - which is today's ketchup as we know it.

Utopia
The word "utopia" is today defined as an ideal society or perfect place. It was taken from the a book titled Utopia by Thomas More in 1516, describing a fictional island with a perfect society.

"Utopia" is ancient Greek in origin and means "Not" + "Place"; in other words, "nowhere". This would suggest that More's book on a perfect society was not possible anywhere.



Orangutan
The orangutan is an animal you've probably seen at the zoo before. Orangutan is derived from the Malay and Indonesian words orang meaning "person" and hutan meaning "forest". So, orangutan means "person of the forest".


Juggernaut
A juggernaut is a term used to describe an unstoppable force, something that crushes everything in its path.

This word comes from the Sanskrit word "Jagannātha", meaning "Lord of the universe". This is one of the many names of Krisha from the ancient Vedic scripts of India.

The famous Jagannath Temple in Puri, India, has an annual chariot procession called Ratha Yatra, which carries the statues of Jagannâth / Krishna. This massive, multi-ton chariot is so enormous in rare instance it has slipped out of control and has caused injury. This led British colonialists to contrive the word "Juggernaut" to refer to unstoppable, crushing forces.


Salary
The ancient Roman word salarium has developed into today's word salary, which is the money we earn from employment. The Roman historian Pliny the Elder stated that soldiers in Rome were originally payed in salt. The Latin word for salt is sal.


Robot
Comes from the Czech word robota, meaning "forced labour" or "hard work". It comes from a play by Czech writer Karl Čapek. This play was performed in 1921 and was entitled R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), where machines take over and turn humans into robotic slaves.



Assassin
The word assassin comes from Hashshashin, an army of trained killers who employed by the Muslims during the Crusades. This society killed members of the Abbasid and Seljuq élite for political and religious reasons. It was thought that these hashashin would smoke hashish, also known as cannabis, so they would be under the influence of drugs when they went out to kill.

Some Islamic scholars now think this unlikely, and favour the etymology of assassiyun, meaning people who were faithful to the foundation (assass) of the Muslim faith.



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  1. deepak_jiet2006 saidFri, 26 Dec 2008 15:32:24 -0000 ( Link )

    awsm thing to Know

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  2. varunthakur84 saidWed, 07 Jan 2009 14:44:57 -0000 ( Link )

    Very Interesting :-)

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  3. ujju saidWed, 04 Feb 2009 07:21:36 -0000 ( Link )

    Nice to know these.

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  4. aboozar saidFri, 25 Sep 2009 05:03:58 -0000 ( Link )

    nice information

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  5. rousseau007 saidThu, 19 Nov 2009 05:09:54 -0000 ( Link )

    Nice to know these

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