Title overview
Tom Read Wilson is here to take us on a rip-roaring tour through some of the most astonishing and amusing words in the English language with Every Word Tells a Story. extraordinary etymological exploration. From eponyms and toponyms to verbs and the frequentative suffix, Tom Read Wilson knows even the most ordinary-sounding word can have the most surprising story behind it!Did you know, for instance, that:
- The word ‘bloomers‘ comes from Amelia Bloomer, who was a women’s rights activist and owner and editor of the first U.S. newspaper edited by and for women, who wanted to move more freely in her knickers?
- Or that the word ‘daisy‘ comes from the Old English d¦ges eage, meaning ‘day’s eye’, because the petals of a daisy open at dawn and close at dusk?
- The word ‘easel‘ comes from the Dutch word ‘ezel’, meaning donkey, because both are depenable and suitable for carrying a load?
- Or that English nicknames for police officers, ‘bobbies‘ and ‘peelers‘, both come from the names of Sir Robert Peel, British prime minister in the 1800s and creator of the first modern police force?