April, 2003
Received from Word a Day,
a free subscription email list
which sends a word a day to build
vocabulary and understanding
After a recent week
of words from law, where many of the words are of French origin, I {Anu} received
this email from a reader:
"I propose you no longer feature words which have a base or stem from the
French language. I no longer see that as a positive e-mail."
In these times when emotions run high, it's understandable why someone would
say that, why US lawmakers would rename French fries and French toast in their
cafeteria menus. Or why a group of German professors thinks they need to exclude
English terms from their vocabulary.
This is not the first time linguistic revisionism is being attempted. During
World War I, in the US, some had tried to rename sauerkraut as "liberty
cabbage", for example. But we're all so interconnected, as are our languages,
that any such attempt quickly falls flat on its face.
"Freedom fries" they say? Well, there's still some French remaining,
as the word fry comes from Old French frire. "Freedom toast"? What
about toast which comes from Middle French toster. Thinking along these lines,
we may even have to rename the US (from Old French estat). Estimates vary, but
one-quarter or more of words in the English language have a French influence.
In the two lines that the above-mentioned reader sent us, at least six words
have French connections (propose, feature, base, language, positive, mail).
A language isn't owned by a country. French belongs as much to France as to
Senegal or Canada or anyone else who speaks it.
To celebrate the
diversity of the English language, this week we'll look at five words that have
come into English from five different languages.
-Anu
anu@wordsmith.org
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