10 Words with Interesting Origins (Etymology) | English Vocabulary Lesson

162,261 views

2017-09-05 ・ English with Lucy


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10 Words with Interesting Origins (Etymology) | English Vocabulary Lesson

162,261 views ・ 2017-09-05

English with Lucy


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:02
(light pop music)
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- Hello everyone and welcome back to English with Lucy.
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Today I've got a video about a brand new subject.
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I'm going to talk to you about etymology.
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So etymology is the history of a word
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and then its historical development
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over time of its meaning.
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It's basically like the timeline of a word.
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So you see where it originated from.
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And then you can see how it evolved
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and changed over time.
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It's something really, really interesting.
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Often when I learn a new word,
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I'll definitely look up its etymology
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to see which language it originates from,
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how it used to be used,
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it's something a bit nerdy that I do.
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It's something that I get a lot of joy from.
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Let me know if you get any joy from doing stuff like that.
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I just like words.
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So today, I've picked ten words with really interesting
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origins and I'm going to chat about them with you.
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In the hope that it will inspire you to study
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a little bit more about the origin of words.
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And also, at the very least,
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help you improve your english.
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Let's get started.
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So, number one, is sandwich.
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So a sandwich, food between two slices of bread.
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It's the most common lunch time food in England.
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Fun fact though, I don't really like bread.
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The reason that I don't like it,
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I just don't see the point in it.
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I feel like sandwiches,
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the bread dilutes the flavour of the filling so yeah,
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just give me the filling.
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Yeah.
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So sandwich, sandwiches actually get their name
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from a man called John Montague
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who was the fourth earl of Sandwich.
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So he was an 18th century aristocrat
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and he used to like to eat his meals
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at the game tables.
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He liked to play games like cards.
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And he didn't want to get all the pieces
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and cards dirty with his greasy fingers,
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so he used to ask for beef between two slices of bread.
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And it caught on with his friends.
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They used to say, you know,
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I'll have what Sandwich is having.
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I'll have a Duke of Sandwich.
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And in the end it got shortened down to just a sandwich
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and it's the food that we know and love today.
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Or most of us know and love.
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I just know it, don't love it.
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Yeah, so there is actually a place
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in the UK called Sandwich,
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which sounds like a really bizarre name,
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but actually, that's where the food originates from.
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Okay, the next one I think is really interesting.
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It's the word nice.
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And it comes from Latin to not know
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or ignorance but then over time it started
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to be used to describe things as agreeable, then delightful.
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Nowadays we use it mostly as a positive adjective.
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Okay, the next one, muscle.
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This actually comes from the Latin word mus for mouse.
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And basically people used to think
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that muscles looked like little mice under your skin.
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So that's where the word muscle comes from.
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Okay, the next one, addict.
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This actually comes from the Latin word to devote
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or to surrender yourself to something
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and it was used for slaves.
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So by saying you're an addict,
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you're saying you're a slave to something.
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Which is quite accurate really.
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Okay, the next word, clue.
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It comes from clew, sounds the same, different spelling.
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Which meant in old English, a ball of thread.
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This is because a ball of thread could be used
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to guide somebody out of a maze or a labyrinth.
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So that was a clue.
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So that is where clue comes from.
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The next one, jargon.
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That is a good word, isn't it?
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I love saying jargon.
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And jargon comes from the old, old French word, jargoun.
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Hope I've said that correctly.
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Meaning twittering like birds.
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So basically, when someone's using a lot of jargon,
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they're twittering like birds,
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it's not really understandable,
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and they're saying a load of rubbish.
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Okay, the next one, this could be considered
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a little bit rude, the next one is avocado,
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and it comes from the Aztec word,
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wonder if I can say, ahuakatl.
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Ahuakatl.
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You can see the similarity.
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But this basically meant, testicle,
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as in the male sex organ.
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So, avocados are sort of similar shapes.
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Obviously, you can see a sort of resemblance
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in shape and texture between an avocado
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and a testicle.
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And also, they are considered to be aphrodisiacs,
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meaning they boost sex drive.
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So, that is where the word avocado comes from.
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The next one is whisky.
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Whisky, that drink that I just cannot seem to like.
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I always accept it when it's offered to me
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and I try and look grown up
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and say yes, on the rocks please.
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And then, ugh, no, can't do it.
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It tastes like fag butts.
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Fag butts, it tastes like fag butts.
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Fag butts are cigarette ends.
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Well whisky, is actually shortened from
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a whisky bay, and that comes from the old English word,
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usquebaugh, which is derived from two Gaelic words,
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uisce, meaning water, bethu meaning life.
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So, they're saying that whisky is water of life.
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Which I think some would consider to be very accurate.
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Not me, I think it's actually the taker of life.
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The next one is the word vagina.
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Yep, the female organ.
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And this word is derived from the Latin word
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for sheath, or scabbard, the thing that would cover a sword.
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And the word gladius, which means sword,
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is commonly used as to refer
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to the male sex organ, the penis.
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So, the vagina, the sheath, covered the sword, the gladius.
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Very interesting.
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The next one, oxymoron.
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This comes from the Greek word oxus,
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meaning sharp and moros, meaning blunt.
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So, sharp blunt, the word itself is an oxymoron.
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Which I think is awesome.
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Ugh, I love languages.
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Right, that's it for today's lesson.
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I know it was a little bit different,
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but I just kind of wanted to share one
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of my passions with you which is etymology
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and just where words come from.
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I find it really, really interesting and I think it,
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if you start to take etymology and the origin
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and history of words onboard,
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you can really quickly expand your vocabulary
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and you can learn to speak in a more meaningful way as well.
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Don't forget to connect with me on all of my social media.
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I've got my Facebook, Instagram, and my Twitter,
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and I will see you soon for another lesson.
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(kiss)
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(light funky music)
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