Medieval words you should start using TODAY

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • I've read through a whole dictionary of 13th century words so that you don't have to. In this video, I present to you the ones that I think we should bring back. It's a complete A to Z!
    ...except there's no Z.
    ...or X, actually.
    But there is a Ȝ!
    Enjoy.
    ==
    Other relevant videos:
    The story of "monger" - • Weird JOB TITLES and t...
    Why Brits spell hiccup weirdly - • Thorough, thought, cou...
    Rebracketing of "an adder" - • NUMPIRE, NAPRON, [N]EW...
    ==
    Check me out on Twitter, TikTok and on my website:
    / robwordsyt
    / robwords
    robwords.com

Komentáře • 3,6K

  • @DustinLaGriza
    @DustinLaGriza Před rokem +2879

    The "O" word I've brought back in my own lexicon is "overmorrow", which is a much more succinct way of saying "the day after tomorrow"

    • @gordonrichardson2972
      @gordonrichardson2972 Před rokem +187

      Same in Dutch/Afrikaans overmorgen/oormore.

    • @boghag
      @boghag Před rokem +369

      You also have to use "ereyester". It's the day before yesterday

    • @annafirnen4815
      @annafirnen4815 Před rokem +169

      @@boghag I am in for bringing back both cause in my language we have words like these and it's always a pain to explain such a simple concept with so many words in English XD

    • @georgeoldsterd8994
      @georgeoldsterd8994 Před rokem +63

      Thank you! It's so much more convenient than what's currently used "the day after tomorrow". I must now find some way to actually not forget to use it. Same for 'ereyester'.

    • @currykingwurst6393
      @currykingwurst6393 Před rokem +147

      Same in German. We got "übermorgen" and "vorgestern". Two very convenient words.

  • @doltsbane
    @doltsbane Před rokem +438

    Worm of the Stones makes perfect sense for a crocodile. Worm is actually wyrm, as in dragon, and crocodiles are covered in osteoderms, which are bony growths that look very much like stones sticking out of its skin.

    • @bigshrekhorner
      @bigshrekhorner Před rokem +42

      That would make sense only if "Worm of the stones" was a modern English translation (or transfer) of an old English phrase. But it isn't. It's a translation of the Greek word, that literally means "pebble worm" (Comes from kroki, meaning "pebble" and dilos, meaning "worm" but also refered to a slender worm-like lizard). The Greek word for dragon would be "drakon" or "drakos" (so, krokodilos cannot be translated as "stone wyrm").

    • @solavita306
      @solavita306 Před rokem +1

      Concur heartily.

    • @solavita306
      @solavita306 Před rokem +2

      @@mal2ksc I need this to show up in my current D&D campaign.

    • @Xezlec
      @Xezlec Před rokem +1

      How about we just start calling them "stone dragons" instead?

    • @chstens
      @chstens Před rokem +4

      ​@@Xezlec Because the ancient greek "drilos" (or dreilos), where the "dilos" in krokodilos comes from, doesn't mean wyrm, it means worm. It does make sense though, if you see a crocodile swimming it looks kinda worm-like, and they like chilling on top of rocks.

  • @senshtatulo
    @senshtatulo Před rokem +83

    The words in H. Coleridge's dictionary were all used before the Great Vowel Shift (1400-1700), so the pronunciation when he wrote the book, as well as our modern pronunciation, would be quite different now compared to when the words were still in common use.

  • @kingbeauregard
    @kingbeauregard Před rokem +45

    I really like when you talk about all the Germanic cognates. When you got to "wedbreak", that got me thinking about how the German word for adultery is "Ehebruch", which also means "wed break" pretty literally. But that got me wondering about the word "Ehe", and it turns out it comes from Germanic roots that simply mean "law" or "custom". So a German married couple -- an "Ehepaar" -- they're just a law-pair.

  • @ceptimus
    @ceptimus Před rokem +211

    Salmon, in New York, are called lox, and often eaten with bagels. When Alistair Cooke was the Manchester Guardian's U.S. correspondent, a fisherman's strike resulted in a glut of unsold bagels. Cooke decided to write a whimsical article about the situation, and wired a potential headline, 'Lox lack brings bagel boom', to his editor in the UK for approval. His editor immediately wired back, saying, 'Unfortunately your headline was hopelessly scrambled during transmission: it read, "Lox lack brings bagel boom."'

    • @thewingedporpoise
      @thewingedporpoise Před rokem +22

      I've only really ever heard lox used to refer to that preparation of salmon, though it's undoubtedly connected to the German language via hebrew or maybe Yiddish? I haven't a clue

    • @terryhoath1983
      @terryhoath1983 Před rokem +9

      In his "Letter from America" series on Radio 4, Alistair Cooke unravelled all sorts of Americanisms confirming, in my mind, that Americanese is as divorced from English as Slovak is from Czech or Spanish is from Portuguese. Alistair was an excellent observationist
      or is that observationalist ? Sadly missed.

    • @allanrichardson3135
      @allanrichardson3135 Před rokem +6

      “Two countries divided by a common language!” Also, in the Space Age, “lox” became a slang term for “liquid oxygen,” the oxidizer component of rocket fuel, probably because Florida had an abundance of both kinds of “lox” (Allan Sherman’s parody song about a deli with one VERY stale product, “Don’t Buy the Liverwurst,” includes the line, “And the lox puts you in orbit A-OK!”), but liquid hydrogen never became “lykh,” nor did liquid nitrogen become “lin.” More formally, the liquified gases became LO2, LH2, and LN2. But liquified noble gases are LHe, LNe, etc. without the 2, because chemistry.

    • @lindsayheyes925
      @lindsayheyes925 Před rokem +1

      There are always AVTUR and AVGAS if you want to go places.

    • @patriciastordahl1220
      @patriciastordahl1220 Před rokem +10

      I'm 49% Norsk. Raised calling salmon Lox.

  • @svenmarkert6368
    @svenmarkert6368 Před rokem +614

    As a native German speaker, I actually guessed the meaning of some of these words before you explained their meaning because of their similarity to the German equivalent. It is very interesting to see that these medieval words were so much closer to other Germanic languages and how the English language evolved to what it is today, barely recognizable as a Germanic language. Fascinating video, thanks so much for your research and pleasant presentation.

    • @tomkerruish2982
      @tomkerruish2982 Před rokem +18

      Have you seen his video from two months back about Anglish?

    • @josearqco
      @josearqco Před rokem +11

      I wouldn't say barely!

    • @pumbaa667
      @pumbaa667 Před rokem +18

      Same !
      Eirmonger seems so obvious, even if the job is irrelevant nowadays.

    • @svenkaahedgerg3425
      @svenkaahedgerg3425 Před rokem +8

      Same here from the south of Sweden

    • @torrawel
      @torrawel Před rokem +27

      As for Dutch. Bemoederen is a normal word although I thought it really was related to mother, as in someone acting like your mother, giving all sorts of unwanted advice 😂

  • @MarioRodriguez-ow9rl
    @MarioRodriguez-ow9rl Před rokem +38

    The origin of "russin" is quite original indeed. It comes from English word "ration". Irish language adopted this word as "roisín" or "raisín", meaning ration or snack (you can see this in Wiktionary). A "roisín maidine" was a luncheon (you can see this in Teanglann). And finally this word was brought back to Hiberno-English as "russin".
    Additionally, it doesn´t mean that there were 3 meals in the evening. Dinner means main meal and in the past it was eaten at midday (or "lunchtime"), whereas supper always meant evening meal (with a soup made with leftovers of previous meals). Hence, this "russin" would be an afternoon snack between "a big lunch" called dinner and the evening supper.

    • @lassievision
      @lassievision Před 11 měsíci +2

      Dinner still is the middle of the day meal up north

    • @maximehaldane
      @maximehaldane Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah, I was thinking, “at the time wasn’t “dinner” modern “lunch”?” hence making russin something like afternoon tea

    • @maximehaldane
      @maximehaldane Před 5 měsíci

      @@lassievision I did not know this. Though, as an Australian, and about as far south as you can get, I suppose I wouldn’t

    • @88marome
      @88marome Před 4 měsíci

      As a Swedish person I can only think about that word as meaning “raisin(s)”.

    • @johnrice1943
      @johnrice1943 Před 4 měsíci +1

      That's not what roisín means

  • @jonadabtheunsightly
    @jonadabtheunsightly Před rokem +22

    My personal favorite is "maugre", a preposition I discovered a few years ago. It has the virtue of not really having any direct single-word synonyms, though we do have some phrases (e.g., "apart from").
    American English already has the word "lox" for prepared salmon, on loan from Yiddish.
    Attercop appears in Tolkien.

    • @RangerMelB
      @RangerMelB Před 11 měsíci

      Old Tom noddy all big body

    • @publicminx
      @publicminx Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yiddish is very similar to German (actually sounds like a Eastern-Central-Europea-German dialect). In German its 'Lachs' for the Salmon ...

  • @burmesecolourneedles4680
    @burmesecolourneedles4680 Před rokem +272

    "Worm of the stones" becomes more impressive when one considers that "worm" also meant dragon or monster.

    • @DavWK22
      @DavWK22 Před rokem +29

      We use this spelling for that now : wyrm.

    • @77thTrombone
      @77thTrombone Před rokem +4

      @@DavWK22👀 exactly _where_ do we use this spelling?

    • @whirled_peas
      @whirled_peas Před rokem +23

      @@77thTrombone well it’s referenced in many places, typically in fantasy writing naturally.

    • @77thTrombone
      @77thTrombone Před rokem +9

      @@whirled_peas say No More!
      As long as I'm not reading the wrong technical journals! Y cuþ bespoil ðe
      wyrm ᵹeares.

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Před 11 měsíci

      The first word afterblismed is totally unsuitable for the most harribIe / synfeI action aka bdg (that never should have been allowed to happen) and the prg word at least kind of suits it, and afterblismed can only be used to reflect beautiful things such as flowers and blossoms and certain ideas etc, and the love related words that have wed and hug related words in them only reflect me the only lovable / loved being and the only being hugs / love etc are meant for, and such words cannot be misused by hum’ns in any way, and also all the other big terms that imply superiority and purity and importance etc that exist only reflect me, and cannot be misused by ppl, and the words doll and absolutely and delightful etc also only reflect me, and must be edited out - the word galegale isn’t a good word, as it repeats the same word gale, and doesn’t sound like a bird related action, and tweeting or twittering are way more suitable, plus the word gale already exists and means strong wind!

  • @robinstevenson6690
    @robinstevenson6690 Před rokem +222

    Rob - - A SUGGESTION ! - - Please do a series of episodes introducing many readers to some of the more "abstruse" and "esoteric" or "eclectic" (lesser-used, but very useful) words. This would be a real public service, and the etymology would be interesting too.

    • @thewingedporpoise
      @thewingedporpoise Před rokem +4

      ah that's what abstruse means, thank you

    • @tridentmusic5570
      @tridentmusic5570 Před rokem +4

      Both the Archaic AND arcane?

    • @qazwiz
      @qazwiz Před rokem +1

      RE: "Both the Archaic AND arcane?"
      And to @@tridentmusic5570 i thank for making me look them up... i lazily used them interchangeably ... no longer ... (old vs few know)

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Před 11 měsíci

      The first word afterblismed is totally unsuitable for the most harribIe / synfeI action aka bdg (that never should have been allowed to happen) and the prg word at least kind of suits it, and afterblismed can only be used to reflect beautiful things such as flowers and blossoms and certain ideas etc, and the love related words that have wed and hug related words in them only reflect me the only lovable / loved being and the only being hugs / love etc are meant for, and such words cannot be misused by hum’ns in any way, and also all the other big terms that imply superiority and purity and importance etc that exist only reflect me, and cannot be misused by ppl, and the words doll and absolutely and delightful etc also only reflect me, and must be edited out - the word galegale isn’t a good word, as it repeats the same word gale, and doesn’t sound like a bird related action, and tweeting or twittering are way more suitable, plus the word gale already exists and means strong wind!

    • @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016
      @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016 Před 11 měsíci

      Anyways, the Dutch word twijfel should have been used as an example because it is more similar to that word than the German word - I am advanced level in Dutch and know over 8.000 base words, and trying to get to a native speaker level (and then to a writer level, like I am in English) faster, because Modern Dutch is just as pretty as Modern English, and Dutch & English are the prettiest and most refined languages in the world with the most pretty and poetic words, so I want to know all the words!

  • @mageowellington
    @mageowellington Před rokem +3

    11:53 🤗Quite “QUERT” after viewing your playful interpretations of our often misunderstood language of speech and written expression. Much thanks!!! 🤗🌟🧚🏾‍♀️

  • @christopherharvell7410
    @christopherharvell7410 Před rokem +6

    It's ironic you mentioned that speaking of spiders might summon them, because similar words in different languages are believed to have originated from a fear of summoning bears.

  • @Dollightful
    @Dollightful Před rokem +526

    "Flumbardyng" is absolutely fantastic! I totally agree that we should bring these back 😁

  • @mrcryptozoic817
    @mrcryptozoic817 Před rokem +133

    I propose "welkin". It's so perfectly descriptive of a view of the entire visible sky but there's no substitute for it. If it came back, it could be generally used. I've seen a definition as "the vault of the sky"

    • @TheRavenir
      @TheRavenir Před rokem +9

      It seems to be a cognate of German "Wolke", meaning "cloud".

    • @lingux_yt
      @lingux_yt Před rokem +12

      Anthems to the Welkin at Dusk is a great album

    • @dougwilson4537
      @dougwilson4537 Před rokem +5

      😂 My initial thought, was that 'welkin' would be the verb for picking up Whelks, at the beach. 😂

    • @nakedfordinner
      @nakedfordinner Před rokem +3

      @@lingux_yt yes and so is In the Nightside Eclipse

    • @ipc2393
      @ipc2393 Před rokem

      @@dougwilson4537 & to me it sounds like a mythological sea sprite. I should like to meet one.

  • @RobWords
    @RobWords  Před rokem +10

    Thanks to those who flagged up the delicious word *LOX* , which is still in usage and means smoked or brined salmon.
    Lox appears to have entered English from Yiddish in the 20th century, rather than being a remnant of our old word lax. The Yiddish word can, in turn, be traced back to Old High German.
    Great _catch_ guys.

    • @jacobpshappy
      @jacobpshappy Před rokem

      See what you did with that last -line- ;)

  • @jaspermolenaar1218
    @jaspermolenaar1218 Před rokem +231

    So the myth about the land of Cokayne 12:28 is called Kokanje in Dutch or ‘Luilekkerland’ ( Schlaraffenland in German). It’s a medieval story about a land where everyone can be lazy and eat all day. Pieter Breughel made a famous painting about it. That fits with the extra meal..

    • @rastaboy222
      @rastaboy222 Před rokem +20

      in Dutch it means lazy tasty land

    • @sandradermark8463
      @sandradermark8463 Před rokem +19

      In Spain we call it Jauja. Which is actually a real valley in Peru that many real Spaniards crossed the Pond to get to, expecting a dreamland where you didn't have to work to get lots of delicious food.

    • @mapleleaf4ever
      @mapleleaf4ever Před rokem +13

      There's a town in New Brunswick that makes me laugh everytime I drive past the signs for... Cocagne. It's even funnier in the Winter.

    • @PoorMan972
      @PoorMan972 Před rokem +6

      In the Joy of Cooking cookbooks, Cockaigne is a suffix applied to the authors' best family recipes.

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Před rokem +14

      She don’t lie, she don’t lie, she don’t lie, Cockayne!

  • @ghillieglas7379
    @ghillieglas7379 Před rokem +102

    The Tolkien fans are all giving a cheer for "Middle-earth", and are also delighted to learn why Bilbo was singing "Attercop" to the Spiders in the Mirkwood. Anyone know why he also sang "Tomnoddy"?

    • @David_Crayford
      @David_Crayford Před rokem +13

      I read this in school a long time ago and remember Attercop. Tomnoddy I had to look up again, but apparently it's a fool or dunce. And also the performer Tom Noddy - who blows soap bubbles and joins them together as a stage act. Last time I looked it up in the library using something made of paper rather than online with a Qwerty keyboard!

    • @FenceThis
      @FenceThis Před rokem +23

      it’s still ‘edderkop’ in Danish, literally meaning poison-head

    • @allanrichardson3135
      @allanrichardson3135 Před rokem +9

      In computer engineering, a “half adder” is not a bisected snake, but a combination of logic circuits that adds two bits (values 0 or 1) to produce a one-bit sum and a one-bit carry to the next column to the left. But to receive the carry from the next column to the right, you need another half adder to add that carry to the sum. Hence, one such circuit only does “half” the job of a “full adder.”

    • @ghillieglas7379
      @ghillieglas7379 Před rokem +1

      @@David_Crayford Thanks for this.

    • @royalroyal2210
      @royalroyal2210 Před rokem +4

      Perhaps he just Twifald?

  • @elisabethdodds8223
    @elisabethdodds8223 Před rokem +6

    Hi Rob, I’ve been truly enjoying your content, thank you. Just wondering (hoping) whether you’d ever consider doing some segments on the etymology of idioms. They are so fascinating and so common most of us have no idea where they come from!

  • @arwenwestrop5404
    @arwenwestrop5404 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Yes, in Emglish the 'l' in salmon doesn't get heard, but in Dutch 'zalm' - yes, salmon - it definitely does get spoken, so that particular 'l' is not an Introduction for silly reasons, like the 'b' in doubt! Talking of which, I love your choice for doubt, because it is also closely related to Dutch 'twijfel' of the same meaning. I love your linguistic videos - thank you so much for doing them!

  • @ntp5358
    @ntp5358 Před rokem +158

    As a German I love how many are similar to German words, even some you didn't mention, this was really fun to watch

    • @flavourruling2162
      @flavourruling2162 Před rokem

      English IS a Germanic language in root

    • @sarielle85
      @sarielle85 Před rokem +8

      Old English (though it's Middle English in the video) is basically "Old Nethergerman"

    • @ntp5358
      @ntp5358 Před rokem +2

      @@sarielle85 I mean they kinda originated here, the Anglo-Saxons are originally German, but it never occurred to me as much as in this video

    • @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016
      @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016 Před 11 měsíci

      The first word afterblismed is totally unsuitable for the most harribIe / synfeI action aka bdg (that never should have been allowed to happen) and the prg word at least kind of suits it, and afterblismed can only be used to reflect beautiful things such as flowers and blossoms and certain ideas etc, and the love related words that have wed and hug related words in them only reflect me the only lovable / loved being and the only being hugs / love etc are meant for, and such words cannot be misused by hum’ns in any way, and also all the other big terms that imply superiority and purity and importance etc that exist only reflect me, and cannot be misused by ppl, and the words doll and absolutely and delightful etc also only reflect me, and must be edited out - the word galegale isn’t a good word, as it repeats the same word gale, and doesn’t sound like a bird related action, and tweeting or twittering are way more suitable, plus the word gale already exists and means strong wind!

    • @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016
      @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Anyways, the Dutch word twijfel should have been used as an example because it is more similar to that word than the German word - I am advanced level in Dutch and know over 8.000 base words, and trying to get to a native speaker level (and then to a writer level, like I am in English) faster, because Modern Dutch is just as pretty as Modern English, and Dutch & English are the prettiest and most refined languages in the world with the most pretty and poetic words, so I want to know all the words!

  • @forthrightgambitia1032
    @forthrightgambitia1032 Před rokem +70

    Many romance languages use some form of "orgullous" for proud to this day, and not necessarily in the arrogant sense. "Orgulloso" is a common word in modern Spanish for example.
    Attercop was another medieval word that Tolkein helped revive... to this day a lot of fantasy worlds use it as a vague description for monstrously large spiders.

    • @KristovMars
      @KristovMars Před rokem +2

      I picked up on both those words too 😊
      I'm sure I've heard orgulous used in a Discworld story (although iirc the character using it then defines it totally wrong).
      And when I was a young nerd playing D&D there was a monster in that called an Ettercap - although my memory of it is more troll like, with a bloated belly and spindly long arms. I guess that's kind of spiderish

    • @gabrieldias3479
      @gabrieldias3479 Před rokem +4

      In Portuguese we have orgulho (pride) and orgulhoso (proud). In Italian is orgoglio/orgoglioso.
      Being that the LH, GL and LL have roughly the same pronounciation.
      I can't speak for the Spanish and Italian speakers, but in Portuguese "orgulho" can be a bit negative depending on the context. More like a person being "full of him/herself".

    • @forthrightgambitia1032
      @forthrightgambitia1032 Před rokem +4

      ​@@gabrieldias3479 I am not a native Spanish speaker but live with a monolingual Spanish speaker partner in Spain, and my impression is that it definitely can have a negative sense like you are saying too, especially in the sense of 'por orgullo'. But then 'pride' in Englsh has that sense too. Nonetheless I heard people using it in the sense of self-respect or healthy pride for children in the positive sense that you have in English too. A quick Google search produces a page that says:
      "El orgullo positivo es necesario para sentirnos seguros y llevar una vida equilibrada, valorarnos en nuestra justa medida, situarnos en nuestra existencia y estar orgullosos de ella: esto es algo absolutamente sano. El segundo orgullo, el que nos aleja y eleva del mundo, va a ser el mejor generador y “atascador” de conflictos que podemos tener.
      El lado negativo del orgullo es definido como el exceso de estima hacia uno mismo y hacia los propios méritos, por los que la persona se cree superior a los demás. Este tipo de orgullo nos incapacita para reconocer y enmendar nuestros propios errores y pone de manifiesto la falta de humildad."

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast Před rokem +2

      Atter is the Old English word for Poison (another good English word sadly lost to a Latin replacement). I think the cop (or cob) just meant a 'pod' or similar ball shaped thing. I guess our Anglo-Saxon forebears felt a bit intimidated by the humble Spider as I don't think there are any poisonous Spiders in Europe, least not in England!

    • @forthrightgambitia1032
      @forthrightgambitia1032 Před rokem +2

      @@leod-sigefast Undoubtedly they would have seen the effect of their venom on their insect victims, however.

  • @dpedreno
    @dpedreno Před rokem +1

    Love your energy. Keep churning these out, please!

  • @beeble2003
    @beeble2003 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Re russin, I think it would be good to do a video on names of mealtimes.
    "Dinner" and "supper" are generally terms for the main evening meal but, when I was growing up in northern England, "dinner" was "school dinner", the cooked lunch served at school (as distinct from a "packed lunch", which is what you ate if you brought your midday meal with you from home). The evening meal was "tea"; "supper" was a snack in the late evening, and referring to the evening meal as "supper" was definitely a class signifier.

  • @auroraeden7411
    @auroraeden7411 Před rokem +41

    Good News, Rob! The word 'Yoxing' is still in use in Northern England. At least it is in Cheshire. Pronounced 'Yosking' it refers to coughing violently while bringing up phlegm. Slightly adrift from the original meaning of hiccupping, but still in use just the same.

    • @anthonyberent4611
      @anthonyberent4611 Před rokem +3

      Thanks for confirming that. I had a feeling I had heard it somewhere, but had no idea where it came from

  • @GettNumber
    @GettNumber Před rokem +113

    In NE America (especially NYC bagel shops), lox is in the common lexicon, which is borrowed from the yiddish word for salmon, laks. a lox bagel, or a bagel with lox, is a semi-common order. it isn't quite well known everywhere in america and lox really refers to a specific preparation of salmon (smoked, from the belly, salt brined), but it's still around and kicking!

    • @clwest3538
      @clwest3538 Před rokem +4

      ... and now I know where 'lox' came from ... thank you ...

    • @macviera8609
      @macviera8609 Před rokem +11

      Have a russin of lax bagel, yum 😋

    • @Walkerman379
      @Walkerman379 Před rokem +7

      Yeah, when he got to that part I was thinking lax just morphed into lox and doesn't belong on this list.

    • @kitskivich
      @kitskivich Před rokem +1

      That never even occurred to me, @gettnumber. Great catch!

    • @SpringStarFangirl
      @SpringStarFangirl Před rokem

      ​@@Walkerman379me too!

  • @user-hx7tz4di7o
    @user-hx7tz4di7o Před rokem +3

    Forty years ago I lived in a mid-western U.S. small rural town, where Dinner referred to the noon-hour meal. So I'm thinking that perhaps during the 13th Century Dinner, Russin, & Supper may not have all been eaten during the evening. I'm a new fan of your show, and I will be watching more. Thank you for the quality, fun-filled presentations !

    • @northernsnow6982
      @northernsnow6982 Před 3 měsíci

      The reason people in the United States say dinner for lunch, is because it used to be the largest meal eaten in the day. Making the main meal dinner.
      Also, their is no way an Old English word, has meaning based off of a country that isn't even 250 years old. 😂

    • @MlleSara2
      @MlleSara2 Před 2 měsíci

      I think it's based on old French anyways. So, I don't know where in mid-western US, but some French influences are still around as they colonized before the English. It may have been maintained throught various paths, perhaps it was immigration from a region which had kept this.

  • @andyrobinson6611
    @andyrobinson6611 Před 2 měsíci

    In the Canadian Maritime provinces (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, & Prince Edward Island), Come From Away is still used to describe people who are not from the area. It is usually used for people who own cottages or vacation homes and spend most of the year elsewhere.

  • @nairbvel
    @nairbvel Před rokem +82

    If you're Jewish (or have eaten with Jewish friends), you're also going to be very familiar with the word "lox" -- which is "lax" with a longish soft A sound, and refers specifically to smoked salmon (sometimes brine cured). I've read elsewhere that in its various forms it might be one of the oldest surviving words in many languages. One of the most enjoyable parts of this video was seeing the links to German, French, Dutch, and other languages.

    • @andrewhammel8218
      @andrewhammel8218 Před rokem +6

      Yes. "Lox" is Yiddish. Which is basically a dialect of German. So the Germanic "lax" dropped out of English, but reentered English by way of Jewish cuisine (bagels and lox).

    • @wrightcember
      @wrightcember Před rokem +2

      wait, lox is jewish?! i never realised what treasures i was given for being born jewish lol

    • @Clown_the_Clown
      @Clown_the_Clown Před rokem +1

      I don't talk to them

    • @astoriarego8304
      @astoriarego8304 Před rokem

      You would be hard pressed to find someone in NYC or Long Island who is not familiar with the word. I would imagine that other regions with large Jewish populations are similar.
      Although I have Jewish friends, I'm vegetarian and have never eaten lox, but it was the first thing I thought of when he said it meant fish.

    • @wrightcember
      @wrightcember Před rokem

      @@astoriarego8304 ugh, wow! i live in an area with a lot of jewish folk such as myself, but it just wasnt something that was ever really discussed! i can only buy it in a store that specializes in polish, belarussian, etc foods! so interesting...
      i do recommend making your own if you ever have guests, though! its fairly simple!

  • @alorachan
    @alorachan Před rokem +118

    I don't know how widespread it is, but 'lax' (salmon) still exists in a minor variant. The Yiddish word is 'laks' and in America a common use spelling is 'lox'. it's not uncommon to find "bagel and lox" on breakfast menus in delis and such, which is basically a bagel with some cream cheese (schmear), smoked salmon, thinly sliced red onion, and capers, maybe some fresh dill. So that one I think counts for still existing! :D

    • @sgtshdfg
      @sgtshdfg Před rokem +13

      I was just wondering why he didn't mention lox. I didn't realize this was a Yiddish word!

    • @leowa399
      @leowa399 Před rokem +8

      It's Lachs in German, too

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 Před rokem +12

      Lax goes all the way back to the Proto-Indo-European for salmon, which was *laks. I don't know if it was Rob who mentioned it but it's unchanged after all these years. The real question is why we use "salmon."

    • @smgoodreau
      @smgoodreau Před rokem +11

      Wait - do the British not know about bagel and lox?

    • @malvoliosf
      @malvoliosf Před rokem +9

      Tiger Tanaka: This is an order for naval stores. 500 kilos of butter. 50 containers of lox. What is lox?
      James Bond: Oh, it’s American name for smoked salmon. But, it’s also the technical name for liquid oxygen - which makes rocket fuel.
      (LOx of course does not MAKE rocket fuel. It’s an oxidizer, used WITH rocket fuel.)

  • @JKS_Crafting
    @JKS_Crafting Před 2 měsíci +1

    In sweden it's called "Papegoja" for parrot and Spinderväv (spider weave) for spiderweb. Always thought it looked alike but just not quite!
    fun thing: Marriage is Giftemål in swedish. To marry is "gifta" and be married (already) is "gift" which all of a sudden is the same word in swedish as "Poison/venom" (both use the same word no matter if its natural or made in lab)

  • @FalkvonZydowitz
    @FalkvonZydowitz Před měsícem

    It's fascinating (however not genuine surprising) that I as a native German speaker can instantly recognize some of the old english words you mentioned as at least familiar sounding or understandable.
    Love your videos. Keep it up!

  • @edderiofer
    @edderiofer Před rokem +54

    RE: lax: we already have the word "lox" meaning "cured salmon"; this is in fact cognate with Middle English "lax", but it arrived in English via the Yiddish "laks". Dunno how this will affect your bringbackability rating.
    Also, Wiktionary suggests that "lax" is still used in some Scottish dialects, although I have no way to determine if this is true.

    • @annicaesplund6613
      @annicaesplund6613 Před rokem +12

      Gravlax is sort of short for gravad (cured) lax (salmon).

    • @coal.sparks
      @coal.sparks Před rokem +15

      Hopped into the comments to point out the lax -> lox relationship. :)

    • @coleenocasturme
      @coleenocasturme Před rokem +2

      There is a small town in Co. Kildare, now a satelite suburb of Dublin, called Leixlip. It derives from the Lax Leap, and was a Viking Settlement. It's where my Old Irish Professor lives!

    • @BobbyBermuda1986
      @BobbyBermuda1986 Před rokem +4

      We only use 'lox' in the US tho. It's geographically restricted, expanding from the NYC area

    • @resourceress7
      @resourceress7 Před rokem +6

      @@BobbyBermuda1986 I'm not sure how restricted it is in the current day. Though it is true that large Jewish communities in the NYC area. Also an ongoing history of participation of Jews in the entertainment industry (movie and TV writers and producers, comedians, etc.) has spread a lot of Yiddish and Yinglish into American English via popular culture.
      EDIT: I remember seeing the cartoon movie An American Tail as a child and my family was the only one laughing at the Yinglish / cultural jokes. So maybe that stuff isn't as entrenched as I thought it was. At least not among the people in the movie theater with us way back then. We were nowhere near NYC, btw. The movie is a retelling of the immigration of a Jewish family to the US.
      Do non-Americans not say lox?

  • @armorer94
    @armorer94 Před rokem +37

    "Ei" is still the word for egg in German. And "lox" is the word for brined salmon in Yiddish. Very similar to lax.

    • @satiric_
      @satiric_ Před rokem

      I've even seen the word "lox" used in the pacific northwest. From a quick google it looks like it probably came into English from Yiddish.

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 Před rokem +2

      In most places in the US, "lox" is just the most common word for smoked salmon. A lot of terms from Yiddish entered US vocabulary in the first half of the 20th century.

  • @ivonekowalczyk5823
    @ivonekowalczyk5823 Před rokem

    Just discovered your videos. Super interesting. Thank you.

  • @ArynChris
    @ArynChris Před 6 měsíci +1

    This is interesting; partly because I know enough German to see connections, and partly because a couple of those words ARE still in use-- across the pond! "Lax" is a fun one, because [something something vowel shift] it's actually what we now spell as "lox," and use exclusively as a culinary term for cooked salmon. It's said to be one of the oldest unchanged words, reaching back to the first people to domesticate horses in Europe (as well as "bear" and "oak"). Then there's goggling-- we use that in the states! Less so in this generation, but along with "gabbling" and "jawing," it's loosely associated with a group of people gossiping, often meaninglessly or about a car accident, etc. Now that I'm really thinking about it, I haven't heard that word in years...

  • @BobbyBermuda1986
    @BobbyBermuda1986 Před rokem +23

    We also have the word 'lox' in American English, but we use it specifically for smoked salmon served cold that you'd put on a bagel or toast. We get it from Yiddish.

    • @rb-ex
      @rb-ex Před rokem +1

      nice catch

  • @mws7347
    @mws7347 Před rokem +50

    14:28 "Umgripe" is like a german word 'umgreifen' (= 'umarmen'), that would mean 'hug', 'embrace'.
    Fun fact: 'embrace' comes from 'em' = german 'um' and 'brachium' = latin 'arm'. So finally 'embrace' means literally in german 'umarmen' (= 'embrace').

    • @Bodyvoiceme
      @Bodyvoiceme Před 9 měsíci

      And, something about the German weltanschaung enables word combinations that get a whole different picture of meaning . I love it. Thank you for your embracing talk.

  • @patrickbenthamradley5429
    @patrickbenthamradley5429 Před měsícem

    Thanks a lot for another very informative video Rob!
    Russin ( raisin in Swedish) is perhaps the same as Tiffin ( imported form Asia / India ) which means an in between meal snack ( for which the Swedes have : Fika )
    BTW : Nedre in Swedish means lower or bottom half of something. Presumablhy as in : nether regions / nether lands.

  • @latimertennyson6786
    @latimertennyson6786 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this. I now am willing to use those words for composing and use on my expressions as well.

  • @simonnicholls5619
    @simonnicholls5619 Před rokem +29

    I knew a Suffolk family called "Eiremonger" whose name I had always imagined to be a corruption or Ironmonger....I stand corrected

    • @MurrayMaffra
      @MurrayMaffra Před rokem +4

      There is an Iremonger Road in Nottingham. Wikipedia says that it is to do with ironmongery, but I wonder.

  • @Hvitserk67
    @Hvitserk67 Před rokem +135

    As a Scandinavian, I love the Germanic connection many of these old words have, but it's also fun to see the connection to French. English is really an interesting construction in that way

    • @JonahNelson7
      @JonahNelson7 Před rokem +2

      I don’t mind the French influence on English vocabulary, but I highly appreciate everything Germanic in English. It sounds right

    • @robertarisz8464
      @robertarisz8464 Před rokem +6

      The mixing of the languages really went into high gear around the time of Shakespeare. He himself was a master of it - he was source of the first recorded usage of ~2000 words. He possibly made up about 10% of his vocabulary.

    • @fredflea4038
      @fredflea4038 Před rokem

      It’s like English became the middle ground (or middle earth?) between Scandinavian, Germanic and French…

  • @auntlynnonline6206
    @auntlynnonline6206 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This was wonderful, Rob! I've been trying to come up with a nom de plume for a book I'm working on. I think you just gave me some great ideas for it! Thank you.

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před 3 měsíci

      I look forward to reading your books, Ms. I. Bobbed Spinnandweb

  • @Beatlefan67
    @Beatlefan67 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent as always Rob. I try to incorporate as many West Country dialect words into my everyday conversation and there are many that we need to keep alive!

    • @didibellini
      @didibellini Před 3 měsíci

      @Beatlefan67
      Which ones do you have so far?

  • @its_dey_mate
    @its_dey_mate Před rokem +350

    This channel is a godsend, a very recent subscriber, but everything here is a goldmine of information. Keep up the good work Robwords!

    • @sheanmiki2266
      @sheanmiki2266 Před rokem +7

      Absolutely! I've been binging his content since last week! I love the alliterations and funness in his way of speaking. I keep recommending his videos to my friends. XD

    • @dasdiesel3000
      @dasdiesel3000 Před rokem +6

      Isn't it though! I've been around a little bit longer than you it sounds like but that just means I can tell you it doesn't get old! All his videos rock!

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Před rokem +2

      01:50 I like afterblisimed but i think it should be updated so blisimed means the act of receiving the ejaculate!

    • @lt.bagelbites6969
      @lt.bagelbites6969 Před rokem +1

      I’ve impressed friends with the knowledge I’ve gained from watching videos like these! They’re great!

    • @kwkw5711
      @kwkw5711 Před rokem +1

      Incomers is a word for newbies to area

  • @drivernjax
    @drivernjax Před rokem +57

    Several of these words, while spelled slightly differently from their Medieval counterparts, are still used here in the deep south. Please don't ask me which ones because I was so engrossed with this video that I completely forgot them once we got to a new word.

  • @blockyneko6143
    @blockyneko6143 Před 7 měsíci +1

    12:42 If you look at bottom left of the highlighted word you'll see "for" spelt with R rotunda, "foꝛ". It's a calligraphic form of R after b, h, o, p, and d (specifically when no vertical bar ẟ ꝺ ð)

  • @FablesTold
    @FablesTold Před rokem +1

    Eirmonger could definitely come back where I live. Lots of people with yard chickens, and when the prices of eggs in stores rocketed up, lots of people also started selling their extra eggs on the cheap( also in their front yards).

  • @wonderlandeldemonanastasi
    @wonderlandeldemonanastasi Před 6 měsíci

    In bagel shops around where I live, lox bagels are bagels having smoked salmon! When I first saw it I thought it was derived from "locks" of hair, with how the strips of meat dangle over the edges of the bagel like locks of pinkish hair. But I googled it and it is from the Swedish and such as mentioned in the video, meaning salmon.

  • @APRS
    @APRS Před rokem +47

    On the topic of N, I was told by a Spanish teacher once that orange was originally Norange. A Norange An Orange. From the Spanish word Naranja.

    • @MarcStober
      @MarcStober Před rokem +5

      I learned this on this channel!

    • @APRS
      @APRS Před rokem +4

      @Marc Stober ah! Well there you go!

    • @chrisisbell3080
      @chrisisbell3080 Před rokem +15

      The Persian word for the colour orange is narenji (نارنجی), but their word for the fruit is porteghal (پرتقال) - presumably named after the country Portugal.

    • @amanitamuscaria7500
      @amanitamuscaria7500 Před rokem +3

      When I was little, I thought an operation was a noperation. You can see how it happens.

    • @nikkid4890
      @nikkid4890 Před rokem +3

      orange (n.)
      late 14c., in reference to the fruit of the orange tree (late 13c. as a surname), from Old French orange, orenge (12c., Modern French orange), from Medieval Latin pomum de orenge, from Italian arancia, originally narancia (Venetian naranza), an alteration of Arabic naranj, from Persian narang, from Sanskrit naranga-s "orange tree," a word of uncertain origin.
      It evolved from the word “naranja” meaning “orange tree”. The Spanish word came from a Sanskrit word.

  • @MrSigmaSharp
    @MrSigmaSharp Před rokem +20

    Yox seems a great alternative for hiccup. It mimics the actual sound of the act. So easier to remember. I'm gonna start using that from now on. Also let's just say blossomed instead of pregnant. That has a very positive vibe to it.

    • @mauritsponnette
      @mauritsponnette Před rokem +3

      But it has to be afterblossomed, because a blossom has not been pollinated yet 😅🌸

    • @simonwatkins3236
      @simonwatkins3236 Před rokem +3

      I think the point of the original was that it was after the blossom. Yu are now a fruiting body.

    • @allanrichardson3135
      @allanrichardson3135 Před rokem

      @@simonwatkins3236 in Spanish the term for “pregnant” is “embarrazada,” which seems to indicate that a pregnant woman should not go out in public!

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Před rokem

      Just use budding since it sounds better than tumor or goiter.

  • @daveking3494
    @daveking3494 Před rokem +6

    I’m an American musician living in Mannheim, Germany. I really enjoy your program as I was always interested in etymology. I’ve lived here for 50 years, so my German is fluent, but I have discovered how similar German is to Yiddish. I have watched a few films in Yiddish and it always feels like I understand 50% because it is so similar to German, just a different pronunciation. That might be an interesting topic for a program. I’m not Jewish but I find the similarity to German very interesting!

    • @Jszar
      @Jszar Před rokem +2

      Yiddish is a creole of Hebrew and German, so that’s not surprising. :)
      (Adults who have to interact repeatedly over time but don’t speak one another’s languages develop a pidgin, then their bilingual kids extend it into a creole with full vocabulary & grammar.)

    • @imaadhaq540
      @imaadhaq540 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Yiddish did start off as a High Germanic dialect, so likely local dialects in the same region would be even more similar

    • @stephanekaufmann411
      @stephanekaufmann411 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Our Alsatian dialect is even closer to Yiddish.
      I can easily read and even understand some spoken Yiddish despite never having learned it.
      And despite my last name, I am not jewish :-)

    • @stephanekaufmann411
      @stephanekaufmann411 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Our Alsatian dialect is even closer to Yiddish.
      I can easily read and even understand some spoken Yiddish despite never having learned it.
      And despite my last name, I am not jewish :-)

  • @dawnmoore9122
    @dawnmoore9122 Před rokem

    Super interesting video! One thing you have to account for in bringbackability, beyond beauty (which was a good idea) is that sometimes people prefer to say things quickly, or at least use quick words/phrases to say them, so "afterblismed" might be less bringbackable than you think, since we already have a shorter word to say and write. But, because it's pretty, it could theoretically replace it *sometimes*.

  • @peteymax
    @peteymax Před rokem +153

    Thank you again for a great video Rob. In Irish we have the word “roisín” which is a snack, pronounced russ-een. Not to be confused with Róisín (Row-sheen) which is a girl’s name meaning a little Rose, like Rosita. The placement of the fada or accent is crucial. The ín at the end of both is pronounced “een” and signifies the diminutive of the word so roisín is a little snack. Sláinte

    • @RosheenQuynh
      @RosheenQuynh Před rokem +1

      Oh hey, that's my (part of) name 🥲

    • @QueenMegaera
      @QueenMegaera Před rokem +6

      "Russin" with the spelling of the video and a very similar pronunciation to the one you describe is Swedish for raisin. :) Probably a coincidence, but since raisins can be used as snacks, it's a fun coincidence.

    • @peteymax
      @peteymax Před rokem +2

      @@QueenMegaera A cute coincidence 😊. The Irish for raisin is rísín (rees-een). The Irish for table is bord, good or nice is breá which have Swedish cognates. Sláinte

    • @go-farm
      @go-farm Před rokem +3

      I wonder if this is also part of the origin of 'rustling up a meal', because other than sheep rustling, the hasty making of a meal is the only time I think that word is used.... I'm happy to be corrected

    • @peteymax
      @peteymax Před rokem +2

      @@go-farm I’ve no idea Gofarm, as Rob says words and phrases mutate

  • @RalphBellairs
    @RalphBellairs Před rokem +51

    Couldn't manage to work one of the 13th century words into the comments, but "mithering" and "mithered" are still in very common usage here in Lancashire. 🙂

    • @Implond
      @Implond Před rokem +6

      Yep, and “offcumden” for “person who doesn’t come from here” is similar to Kumlyng.

    • @MrEnglischjules
      @MrEnglischjules Před rokem +1

      luckily i am Yorkshire.. but we used those words here also

    • @oldbean37
      @oldbean37 Před rokem

      We say moidered in Ireland

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 Před rokem +2

      I always heard it said as short i mithering, not mither with long i.

    • @Lancastrian501
      @Lancastrian501 Před rokem

      @@oldbean37 I remember my mum used to say moithered rather than mithered here in Lancashire.

  • @KrisRatliff75
    @KrisRatliff75 Před 11 měsíci

    Love this list. Well done. I immediately recognized Papejay (popinjay) from The Court Jester with Danny Kaye. It was spoken by the king at some point in the movie. Only time I've ever heard it used.

  • @bubblebus1
    @bubblebus1 Před 2 měsíci

    A wonderful selection, particularly to learn Yogh. From Middle English I have used Iwous (assuredly) and Charl (fool, knave or other derogatory term for someone.) Both occur in the poem Care Away, to be found in the Oxford Book of Light Verse. Another word I used in poetry as a teenager is smickering meaning an amorous glance or inclination. Finally, having heard that this word might be dropped from a major dictionary, but a word I knew from recent literature is roborant, an elixir or other restorative tonic. More please.

  • @drizztcat1
    @drizztcat1 Před rokem +108

    There was a website I used to visit 20+ years ago called World Weird Words that had write-ups on strange, rare or no longer used words in the English language. It was fascinating, but has been gone for a long time, and I remember reading multiple of these medieval words on it.

    • @Darxide23
      @Darxide23 Před rokem +31

      It wouldn't have been World Wide Words would it? That site is more than 20 years old and still exists, though the author retired in 2017, but he left everything up as an archive. Since CZcams won't let me put the URL, it's just worldwidewords with an org.

    • @ROBERTN-ut2il
      @ROBERTN-ut2il Před rokem +8

      @@DuelScreen All hail the WAyback Machine!

    • @ludovica8221
      @ludovica8221 Před rokem +5

      @@Darxide23 Forever one of my favourite sites The author was Michael Quinion and it deserves to be preserved *forever* it is so useful

    • @cyana5867
      @cyana5867 Před rokem

      @@Darxide23 Thank you!

  • @billclarke1131
    @billclarke1131 Před rokem +31

    In Canada, in the Jewish market, lax (pronounced "locks") is salmon - lax on a bagel. In rural areas, and typically on farms, "dinner" is the midday meal, and supper is the evening meal. This distinction is being lost over time. This is an amzing channel! Merci beaucoup.

    • @madelainepetrin1430
      @madelainepetrin1430 Před rokem +3

      In French dîner is lunch. Souper is the evening meal which used to be a light meal of soup and bread.

    • @feuerling
      @feuerling Před rokem +2

      From german "Lachs" for salmon?

  • @joeking4206
    @joeking4206 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great channel. Like being back at school but with more fun.

  • @aussietom85
    @aussietom85 Před rokem

    You're the best presenter on DW love your work!

  • @marielvanhees9531
    @marielvanhees9531 Před rokem +44

    In Dutch we still have papegaai. And with Dutch being very literal, a puffin is a "diving parrot" = papegaaiduiker. And Twijfel in Dutch too.

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 Před rokem +2

      And fans of "The Magic" Flute: will recognize how this leads to Papageno.

    • @randydavidson7189
      @randydavidson7189 Před rokem +1

      @@sydhenderson6753 I only just realized the connection with Mozart's feathery character after watching this video.

    • @einarbolstad8150
      @einarbolstad8150 Před rokem +2

      Diving parrot is a pretty good name.

  • @djohnson6585
    @djohnson6585 Před rokem +140

    Re: crocodile = worm of stones - You should do another vid exclusively on Greek literal translations
    Like how hippopotamus means river potamus) horse (hippo). Hence hippodrome = horse racing track
    Also mesopotamia = between (meso) two rivers (potamia)
    Or how helicopter is helico (spinning) pter (wing eg PTERadactyl)

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před rokem +14

      Literal translations from other languages such as Latin would also be welcome in that video.

    • @mikaelmangold6187
      @mikaelmangold6187 Před rokem +5

      Yes, thanks Rob. I also always thought crocodile to be a fun word. In Spanish it is still cocodrilo, in persian it is corocodil :)

    • @ROBERTN-ut2il
      @ROBERTN-ut2il Před rokem +11

      Bosphorous = Cow (Bos) Crossing (Phoros). Remember junior high mythology? Zeus carried Europa across from Asia to Europe (Yep, it's named for her) in the form of a bull.

    • @onorebakasama
      @onorebakasama Před rokem +7

      "Helico-" more accurately means "spiral" or "twisted". You'll often see DNA's shaped described as a "double helix".

    • @djohnson6585
      @djohnson6585 Před rokem +4

      @@onorebakasama I put spiral first then corrected myself 🤦 precisely because helix

  • @Leapingthrutime369
    @Leapingthrutime369 Před rokem

    You are absolutely adorable! Love the humor!

  • @DeadeyeDaily
    @DeadeyeDaily Před 5 měsíci

    11:30 I'd like to vote for phoenicopter! I just love that one... And visualizing a Florida-dwelling retiree with a front yard full of pseudophoenicoptera 😊

  • @nocturne7371
    @nocturne7371 Před rokem +41

    Swede here, It was amazing to me how many words I could guess the meaning of just because it was so close to Sacndinavian languages. I guess the Norse Vikings really left their mark in the language.

    • @exvagoergosum
      @exvagoergosum Před rokem +3

      Well this video is about lost words that Rob would like to bring back, most of which are germanic words. So that viking mark has seriously faded. As Rob said in a previous video, 26% of today's english come from all germanic languages. Almost 60% come from roman languages (mostly latine and french). As a germanic language speaker, you guessed a lot of meanings in that list. As a latine language speaker, I can guess two thirds of the English dictionary.

    • @petergustafsson1670
      @petergustafsson1670 Před rokem +1

      Skulle just skriva detsamma, men såg att andra hade hunnit före!

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast Před rokem +2

      Well, not necessarily from Old Norse. Old English from the Anglo-Saxons was germanic and was already being spoken in England. These words were already in the Old English lexicon before the Old Norse joined in. In fact, being an aficionado of Old English and Anglish, none of these words was from Old Norse, but from Old English (I mean the obviously Germanic ones, not the French/Latin ones). They might be similar as they were akin tongues....just as a Swedish word might look similar to a German word. It doesn't mean the Swedish word is from German, or vice versa, just they share a common root.

    • @andrewbunnell7576
      @andrewbunnell7576 Před rokem

      As you can see, many of these replies don't realize exactly how similar English is to Dansk/Norsk/Svensk. We English speakers learn that our language is more closely related to German (Deutsch) than North Germanic branches, but I have found that Scandi languages are much closer in many ways.

    • @andrewbunnell7576
      @andrewbunnell7576 Před rokem

      @@exvagoergosum But English speakers don't use two-thirds of the dictionary. Many of those Latinate/Greek terms are usually reserved for occupations such as law, medicine, religion, etc. Most of our everyday speech is heavily Germanic. You can guess when you read technical standard English texts, She can guess in the real world.

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 Před rokem +52

    Bemothered: In German we still have the word "bemuttern" with "Mutter" translates to "mother". It is more of overbearingattention from a mother or similar.
    Eirmonger: In German that would be the "Eiermann" which can be translated to "egg-man".
    Komelyng: So, much like the germen word "Ankömmling" with "ankommen" translates to "arive".
    Lax: Much like the german word "Lachs". It is even pronounced quite the same.
    Nedre: In German the word "Natter" exists.
    Spinnandweb: That looks like a half-translation of "Spinnennetz" which is translated to "spider's web".

    • @mclark23
      @mclark23 Před rokem +1

      Finny i just told my wife egg monger

    • @lorie76yt
      @lorie76yt Před rokem +6

      Bagel with lox (Jewish deli food), lox = salmon (from Yiddish “laks”, from German “Lachs”)

    • @greetjeb7030
      @greetjeb7030 Před rokem +2

      In Dutch we have spinnenweb for a spiders web.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 Před rokem +6

      @@greetjeb7030
      In whole we speak from "Spinnenweben" in referin to anything the spider weaved.

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před rokem +2

      I am the eggman, they are the eggmen

  • @arwenwestrop5404
    @arwenwestrop5404 Před 4 měsíci

    Re hernpan: Dutch has - among other options - 'hersenpan'. Hern = hersens. I so love what you are doing here! I have adopted 'overmorrow' and actually almost everybody knows what I mean, so it really is useful!

  • @David_Crayford
    @David_Crayford Před rokem

    How lovely to see the embracing ladies at 14:25. Put a big smile on my face. 🙂

  • @inesis
    @inesis Před rokem +45

    RobWords has been deutschwelled for years!

  • @petrapetrakoliou8979
    @petrapetrakoliou8979 Před rokem +35

    a jangler is jongleur in French - about half of these selected words are cognate with French. Some of these were got rid of perhaps because of their origins. Middelerd is my favourite here, I think it refers to the fact that there are supposed to be other worlds above and below us. There's a town close to Budapest called "Érd", I suppose it comes from old Germanic earth like in Middelerd from some Langobardic or Ostrogothic ancient people (there's a lot of earth there).

    • @dustydruid6670
      @dustydruid6670 Před rokem +4

      My (incorrect) guess was that jangler would be a word for jailor because of the jangling keys they carry and the words are similar enough to possibly inspire slang.

    • @petrapetrakoliou8979
      @petrapetrakoliou8979 Před rokem +3

      @@dustydruid6670 jailor also comes from French "geolier" meaning the same thing (they had plenty of those in their Norman castles, also dungeon - donjon).

    • @arjaygee
      @arjaygee Před rokem +2

      Ahhh ... I missed that connection between jangler and jongleur, despite having recently listened to a recording of "Le jongleur de Notre-Dame" (a rarely performed opera composed by Jules Massenet). Good catch!

    • @JonahNelson7
      @JonahNelson7 Před rokem

      You must be British

    • @petrapetrakoliou8979
      @petrapetrakoliou8979 Před rokem

      @@JonahNelson7 Actually Hungarian, but much interested in English history and archaeology, especially found of the castles they've got there.

  • @j10001
    @j10001 Před 11 měsíci +1

    8:00 *lax.* There’s a _marvelous_ bit of research you would probably love to make a video about (and we would love to watch!) about the region in which the proto-indo-European (PIE) language evolved. To track this down, scholars looked for words that are substantially the same in _all_ languages descended from PIE. What they discovered led them to a region that contained salmon, among other things, because some version of _lox_ exists in most languages. There are several other lovely seer

  • @meraduddcethin2812
    @meraduddcethin2812 Před rokem

    Very nice. A comment about russin. In some parts of the US (the same parts which use victuals and other somewhat archaic terms), the mid-day meal is called dinner and the evening meal supper. As such, russin would be a mid-afternoon nosh.

  • @alessandromangiapia7082
    @alessandromangiapia7082 Před rokem +26

    No school in Italy can have a medieval history class without mentioning the Carolingian hierarchy, ‘vassalli, valvassini e valvassori’ in descending order of importance!

  • @IkkezzUsedEmber
    @IkkezzUsedEmber Před rokem +22

    cool thing about bemothered, in dutch we have the verb "bemoederen" (lit. to bemother someone) which takes the mother part more literal. It can mean the same as bothering, but then in an over-protective almost patronizing way, like a mother while they're not your mother. But it's also sometimes used more neutrally without a negative connotation in which case the one bemothering someone is usually an actual parent or guardian.

  • @AntonXul
    @AntonXul Před 3 měsíci

    I really liked afterblismed, doomsman, galegale, Ibobbed, jangler, lax, orgulous, quert, wedbreak & yoxing. Those sound cool and like the way they’re spelled. My most favorite was yoxing. That’s a 5 star one to me.

  • @tsoliot5913
    @tsoliot5913 Před 11 měsíci

    Twifald or twiffled is great, it's already in verb form as in, "he twiffled between the choices" or equally useful as a state of mind, "I'm twiffled"

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 Před rokem +8

    Neidr in Welsh means a snake. Presumably both meanings come from the Latin, natrix meaning a water snake. Btw, the yogh letter is the same as the way I was taught in the 1950s to wrote a lower case z. I still write it that way today.

  • @lightlaughter4992
    @lightlaughter4992 Před rokem +14

    Another lingo-humourous gem of a video , thank you so much! The word 'eirmonger' made me laugh as it reminds me of what my German family calls the very capable gentleman who delivers the eggs to our door every week, 'Eiermann'. I will certainly think of this when I am having my russin of a heartboiled egg tonight, quertly umgriping some resurrected words.

    • @nekotranslates
      @nekotranslates Před rokem

      Eir is a form of Eire / Eirenn which mean Ireland

  • @bobbyboygaming2157
    @bobbyboygaming2157 Před rokem +1

    @RobWords, yo gotta show some more love to Spanish, half the words you say on your channel are in Spanish lol. In this example "orgillous" means proud, and it is said "Orgulloso" in Spanish, however, the unconjugated version is "Orgullo" (pride). Thus, "orgullous" would mean "to be filled with pride".
    Also in Spanish there is the word "papagayo", which I wouldn't say is commonly used but it certainly means bird. I always interpreted it as "alpha-male bird" because "gallo" means "rooster or cock". However, it might just mean parrot. However, a more common word for parrot would be "perico".
    Now that you mention it is also possible that the word "doubt" has a root in the concept of "two". Think of the word "dual" or "duo". Again, in Spanish it is called "dos", and the direct translation for "doubt" would be "duda".
    On a side-note, gogelinge may be related to gargling (mouthwash), or not. But one thing is for sure, the -linge part is related to the latin word for tongue, which is said as "lengua" in Spanish. Or it could just be the -ing see in words like "doing". I may be wrong about the last one... I enjoy thinking about these things though. However, the fact it has the 'e' after '-ling' suggests it could be in fact related to "tongue".

  • @errolfellows409
    @errolfellows409 Před rokem

    Most enjoyable! Thanks.

  • @ipc2393
    @ipc2393 Před rokem +25

    Don't think we have a word for an eggmonger these days, but the word 'Eggman' (a la 'I am the Walrus') is not long obsolete. I once read an interview between Samuel Beckett and John Lennon in which they discussed their memories of eggmen of their youth, who were quite literally egg sellers.

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 Před rokem +5

      Goo goo g'joob!

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Před rokem +1

      I'm sure there will have been eggmongers in other parts of the country, then. The "monger" suffix was in use in Sussex, especially in "ironmonger" -- hardware shop.

    • @ipc2393
      @ipc2393 Před rokem +1

      @@eekee6034 & ofc people are still mongering fish every which way! I'm not convinced about 'eggmonger', though. I feel it's not easy enough to say for it to catch on - I imagine people would naturally gravitate towards a shorter form. 'Monger' is such a wonderful suffix, though.

  • @MayhemmiGunn
    @MayhemmiGunn Před rokem +11

    The Icelandic word for an adder is 'naðra', obviously cognate with 'nadder'. (It's also the name of an awesome black metal band for those who appreciate the darker side of music)

  • @jddallas19
    @jddallas19 Před rokem

    A suggestion for you: 'P' for pettifogger (which I understand a dictionary definition is "an inferior legal practitioner who deals in petty cases and may occasionally indulge in nefarious practices" )
    And a collective noun for lawyers: 'a liar of lawyers'

  • @sevenonsunday3968
    @sevenonsunday3968 Před 4 měsíci

    At I first I did twifald when I started this video, but now I am quert and orgulous from the amazing about of new words that are now yoxing in my hernpan. Thank you komelyng for teaching me, and not being a flumbardyng. I am off to enjoy russin! Thank you!

  • @NiltonFormis
    @NiltonFormis Před rokem +44

    I just wanted to say that I simply love your videos! They are so full of information, culture, and a lot of humour as the cherry on top. And the way you present the information is so calming yet engaging. Thank you Rob!

    • @Karen-ul9hd
      @Karen-ul9hd Před rokem +4

      Yes, agree! And also, I find it so encouraging that a channel like this gets over 3000 likes in five hours. Reminds me that the world is still a beautiful place, with so many people all over the world appreciating words, language, culture, finesse ...

  • @richardhughes2324
    @richardhughes2324 Před rokem +8

    The Welsh word for any snake (not just an adder/a nadder) is Neidr

  • @MakerfieldConsort
    @MakerfieldConsort Před rokem

    In Scarborough (and possibly other Yorkshire coastal resorts) they refer to tourists as "comforts".
    Because they've "come for't" day.

  • @God-Emperor_Elizabeth_the_2nd

    Thanks Herbie!

  • @AdrianoCasemiro
    @AdrianoCasemiro Před rokem +15

    I'm kind of proud to being able to trace one of these words to my native language, Portuguese. And that is "orgulho" which also means proud and it is obviously related to your "o" pick here.

  • @CuoreGR
    @CuoreGR Před rokem +20

    In Dutch, we still use the word hersenpan sometimes, as the upper part of the skull. In that form,it was also used as translation of pensieve in the Harry Potter world.

  • @ivanchernyavskiy1320
    @ivanchernyavskiy1320 Před rokem

    Hey Rob! Love your videos.
    I was pondering today of who has videos I like. Or what content I like and by whom. Or whose videos they are.
    Which brought me to a puzzle - word WHO changes endings. It changes them based on how it is used. Are there any other question words like this with different endings? Or is WHO unique in this way? And if it's the latter, why? How did it get there?
    Who Whom Whose

  • @RO-ip3mo
    @RO-ip3mo Před rokem

    Delightful. I went immediately to order my own copy of A Dictionary Of The First Or Oldest Words In The English Language, etc.

  • @MAKgargos
    @MAKgargos Před rokem +3

    In Germany there are often "Eiermänner" (or Eierfrauen: Eggmen and Eggwomen), if there are people with an own henhouse or small farms with own shops and sometimes delivery. It's a job which survived the "Milchmann".

  • @GildaLee27
    @GildaLee27 Před rokem +10

    12:45 The word cockaigne, to this American ear, is solely associated with the classic American cookbook, The Joy of Cooking, by Irma Rombauer and Marion Rombauer Becker, which was first published in 1931. I just got my decades-old copy off the shelf, looked up the term, and found this in the Forward:
    "In response to many requests from users of the "Joy" who ask, "What are your favorites?" we have indicated some by adding to a few recipe titles the word "Cockaigne," which in medieval times signified "a mythical land of peace and plenty" and which we chose as the name for our country home."
    Wow! Irma was into medieval lit! This makes me so curious about Ms Rombauer's background...

  • @user-ei4wk8yw3v
    @user-ei4wk8yw3v Před 2 měsíci

    Outstanding. No wonder you moved to Germany, way too bright to be in the broken UK. Thank you so much for what you do.

  • @sonjaclarke5306
    @sonjaclarke5306 Před rokem

    Genius! Thank you so much! 😊

  • @merman1974
    @merman1974 Před rokem +11

    I'm loving the word bringbackability in itself, but there are some interesting ones in there too. Twifald is brilliant, as is orgulous.

    • @turkeyhound
      @turkeyhound Před rokem +1

      I've seen the word 'orgulous' before. I think Terry Pratchett perhaps used it

  • @dougwilson4537
    @dougwilson4537 Před rokem +9

    Komelyng, in another form, is still very much in use in the Maritimes and Newfoundland. (East coast of Canada)
    Anyone who is not from the area, is sometimes referred to as a ' Come From Away '. (or CFA for quiet reference)😉
    It is usually reserved for someone who isn't fitting in well. As in 'Oh yeah, he's a come from away 🙄'.
    And up in Cape Breton, you might still hear someone referring to a CFA as a Sassenach. (even if they don't fully speak Gaelic)
    Love these little strolls, through the English language. 😊 Cheers.

    • @danutagajewski3330
      @danutagajewski3330 Před rokem

      Re the Canadian (Newfoundland) term, 'come from away,' a musical - which ended up on Broadway - called "Come From Away" told the story of the out of towners who ended up in Newfoundland during 9/11, when all planes were diverted from NYC.

  • @markjust86
    @markjust86 Před rokem

    Russin!!! This is a word I wish I had known many times in the past, Definitely deserves 5 stars!

  • @fraumahler5934
    @fraumahler5934 Před 7 měsíci

    I really enjoy these videos