Birth of a nickname - John McWhorter

437,566 views ・ 2013-09-24

TED-Ed


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

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English, like all languages,
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is a messy business.
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You can be uncouth but not couth.
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You can be ruthless,
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but good luck trying to show somebody
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that you have ruth
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unless you happen to be married
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to someone named Ruth.
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It's bad to be unkempt
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but impossible to be kempt,
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or sheveled as opposed to disheveled.
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There are other things
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that make no more sense than those
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but that seem normal now
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because the sands of time
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have buried where they came from.
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For example, did you ever wonder
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why a nickname for Edward is Ned?
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Where'd the N come from?
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It's the same with Nellie for Ellen.
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Afterall, if someone's name is Ethan,
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we don't nickname him Nethan,
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nor do we call our favorite Maria, Nmaria.
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In fact, if anyone did,
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our primary urge would be to either scold them
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or gently hide them away
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until the company had departed.
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All these nicknames trace back to a mistake,
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although, a perfectly understandable one.
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In fact, even the word nickname is weird.
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What's so "nick" about a nickname?
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Is it that it's a name that has a nick in it?
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Let's face it, not likely.
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Actually, in Old English, the word was ekename,
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and eke meant also or other.
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You can see eke still used
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in Chaucer's <em>Canterbury Tales</em> in a sentence like,
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"Whan Zephyrus eek with his sweete breeth,"
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which meant,
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"When Zephyr also with his sweet breath."
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Ekename meant "also name."
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What happened was that when people said, "an ekename,"
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it could sound like they were saying,
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"a nekename,"
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and after a while,
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so many people were hearing it that way
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that they started saying,
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"That's my nickname,"
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instead of, "That's my ekename."
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Now, the word had a stray n at the front
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that started as a mistake,
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but from now on was what the word really was.
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It was rather as if you had gum
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on the bottom of your shoe
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and stepped on a leaf,
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dragged that leaf along for the rest of your life,
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were buried wearing that shoe
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and went to heaven in it
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to spend eternity wedded to that stray, worn-out leaf.
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Ekename picked up an n and never let it go.
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The same thing happened with other words.
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Old English speakers cut otches into wood.
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But after centuries of being asked
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to cut an otch into something,
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it was easy to think you were cutting a notch instead,
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and pretty soon you were.
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In a world where almost no one could read,
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it was easier for what people heard
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to become, after awhile,
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what it started to actually be.
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Here's where the Ned-style nicknames come in.
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Old English was more like German
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than our English is now,
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and just as in German, my is mein,
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in Old English, my was meen.
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You would say meen book,
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actually boke in Old English,
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or meen cat.
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And just as today,
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we might refer to our child
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as my Dahlia
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or my Laura,
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in Old English, they would say, "Meen Ed".
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That is mein Ed,
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mein Ellie.
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You see where this is going.
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As time passed, meen morphed
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into the my we know today.
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That meant that when people said, "Mein Ed,"
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it sounded like they were saying my Ned.
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That is, it sounded like whenever someone
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referred to Edward affectionately,
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they said Ned instead of Ed.
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Behold, the birth of a nickname!
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Or an ekename.
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Hence, also Nellie for Ellen
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and Nan for Ann,
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and even in the old days, Nabby for Abigal.
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President John Adam's wife Abigail's nickname was Nabby.
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All sorts of words are like this.
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Old English speakers wore naprons,
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but a napron sounds like an apron,
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and that gave birth to a word apron
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that no one in Beowulf would have recognized.
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Umpire started as numpires, too.
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If all of this sounds like something sloppy
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that we modern people would never do,
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then think about something you hear all the time
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and probably say,
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"A whole nother."
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What's nother?
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We have the word another, of course,
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but it's composed of an and other,
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or so we thought.
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Yet, when we slide whole into the middle,
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we don't say, "a whole other,"
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we clip that n off of the an
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and stick it to other
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and create a new word, nother.
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For a long time, nobody was writing
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these sort of things down
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or putting them in a dictionary,
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but that's only because writing
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is more codified now than it was 1,000 years ago.
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So, when you see a weird word,
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remember that there might be
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a whole nother side to the story.
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