The Chronology of Words and Phrases: A Thousand Years in the History of EnglishKyle Cathie, 1999 - 269 pages "Throughout history, events great and small have left their mark on the way we speak. Starting from 1066 and working through to the modern-day green movement, with a nod towards the invention of playing cards, the California Gold Rush and the first recorded blizzard along the way, The Chronology of Words and Phrases links hundreds of words and phrases with the historical upheavals and minor social changes which gave them life. A words book for historians and a history book for wordsmiths, it will have pride of place in any book lover's collection." --Book Jacket. |
From inside the book
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Page 72
... beginning in am- were borrowed from Latin terms beginning with adm- , Latin admīrārī , ' to admire ' was believed to be the root , hence the coining of the alternative Old French admiral and medieval Latin admīrālis . Middle English ...
... beginning in am- were borrowed from Latin terms beginning with adm- , Latin admīrārī , ' to admire ' was believed to be the root , hence the coining of the alternative Old French admiral and medieval Latin admīrālis . Middle English ...
Page 83
... beginning of the fourteenth century . It came from Latin pestilentia , ' highly infectious disease causing great mortality ' . The Roman Empire had been no stranger to fatal epidemics with high death tolls . In AD 80 , for instance , it ...
... beginning of the fourteenth century . It came from Latin pestilentia , ' highly infectious disease causing great mortality ' . The Roman Empire had been no stranger to fatal epidemics with high death tolls . In AD 80 , for instance , it ...
Page 190
... beginning ' . When Aborigines was borrowed from Latin into English in the sixteenth century , it carried the same meaning , ' predecessors of the ancient Romans ' , but from the seventeenth century was extended to refer to ' the ...
... beginning ' . When Aborigines was borrowed from Latin into English in the sixteenth century , it carried the same meaning , ' predecessors of the ancient Romans ' , but from the seventeenth century was extended to refer to ' the ...
Other editions - View all
The Chronology of Words and Phrases: A Thousand Years in the History of English Linda Flavell,Roger Flavell No preview available - 2001 |
Common terms and phrases
According adjective Ages American animal appeared applied became become began beginning birds borrowed brought building called carried Church cloth comes common court dates denote derived describe developed Dutch earliest early eighteenth century England established Europe European eventually expression fifteenth figurative finally forced fourteenth century France gave Germanic given Greek hence Henry important influenced instance introduced invention Italian Italy John king knight known land languages late later Latin lives London meaning meant medieval Middle English nineteenth century noun Old English Old French originally particular passed person phrase popular probably produced published recorded referred remained responsible second half sense seventeenth century ships sixteenth century sometimes soon Spanish subsequently taken term thirteenth century Thomas took translation turn unattested verb word writing written