By the same reckoning, I wonder what 'in 5 minutes' will mean two hundred years from now?
I'm quite into paleontology (ancient study of life). Most of the taxonomic definitions are derived from Greek.
None of those sounds like Greek. You must mean Latin.
Google them. You'll find they are.I said most, not all.
I stand [partially] corrected, the first two you cited are Latin, the next three are Greek.
Greek and Latin form the roots of most of our language today.
I could go on, but I'm probably boring most of you now.![]()
In English, we often have different words for animals and for the meat we get from them - e.g. pig/pork, cow/beef, sheep/mutton. This in contrast to other European languages - for example, the Dutch for pork is 'varkensvlees', which just means pig meat (varken is pig, vlees is meat). In English, the word for the animal comes from Old English, while the word for the meat comes from French. The reason for this is that for 300 years after the Norman invasion, the ruling classes (the only ones who could afford to eat meat regularly) spoke French, and the people who took care of the animals were the native English speakers.
No problem. Greek and Latin form the roots of most of our language today. But in certain areas of science, like paleontology, Greek is often favoured over Latin. I don't know why, but it just is.
No problem. Greek and Latin form the roots of most of our language today. But in certain areas of science, like paleontology, Greek is often favoured over Latin. I don't know why, but it just is.
Most of the roots of English is Anglo-Saxon - compare how many common words are broadly similar to German. The Greek and Latin parts are confined mostly to technical terms. There's also a lot of French, but that's mostly in art and the military. The Vikings left us a lot of place names, plus a few other words. But as I said, the basic everyday stuff is evolved from Anglo-Saxon. That was the last invasion which completely displaced the indigenous population.
Most of the roots of English is Anglo-Saxon - compare how many common words are broadly similar to German. The Greek and Latin parts are confined mostly to technical terms. There's also a lot of French, but that's mostly in art and the military. The Vikings left us a lot of place names, plus a few other words. But as I said, the basic everyday stuff is evolved from Anglo-Saxon. That was the last invasion which completely displaced the indigenous population.
The word overclocker is derived from ancient times when men would clock their wives in the ovaries for cooking them an unsatisfactory meal.
Amidoingitright?
Most of the roots of English is Anglo-Saxon - compare how many common words are broadly similar to German. The Greek and Latin parts are confined mostly to technical terms. There's also a lot of French, but that's mostly in art and the military. The Vikings left us a lot of place names, plus a few other words. But as I said, the basic everyday stuff is evolved from Anglo-Saxon. That was the last invasion which completely displaced the indigenous population.
The word 'Moyles' means a second hand car dealer who doesn't sell cars but trades in criminally fraudulent tax evasion activities.