enthusiasm / enthuse

14 February 2015

The meanings of words change over time. Sometimes words become more specialized; the Old English deor was used to refer to any kind of wild beast, but by the end of the thirteenth century had started to be used specifically to refer to the creature we now call a deer. Other words become more general; one such is enthusiasm.

Enthusiasm comes into English from Greek, where it refers to the state of being possessed by a god. It was a religious term for a state of divine ecstasy or frenzy. A poet, for instance, might be filled with enthusiasm by his muse. The Latin and Greek meaning was the sense of the word when it was first used in English.

Edmund Spenser uses the Greek word in his 1579 Shepheardes Calendar for the month of October, saying that poetry is:

a diuine gift and heauenly instinct not to bee gotten by laboure and learning, but adorned with both: and poured into the witte by a certaine ἐνθουσιασμός and celestiall inspiration

Within a few decades, the word had been anglicized. Philemon Holland, in his 1603 translation of Plutarch’s Morals, writes:

The Dæmons use to make their prophets and prophetesses to be ravished with an Enthusiasme or divine fury.

By the beginning of the eighteenth century, enthusiasm had become generalized and was not always used in a religious sense or in reference to poetry. Now it could mean any passion or intense feeling toward someone or something, which is how it’s most commonly used today. So White Kennett could, in 1716, write a letter containing:

The King of Sweden [...] must have much more enthusiasm in him to put it in execution.

But the shifts in meaning were not finished. By the beginning of the twentieth century, an enthusiasm could also be a temporary fad or craze or a hedonistic indulgence, and James Joyce could write in his 1916 A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man about Stephen Dedalus’s youthful revels and carousing:

The letters cut in the stained wood of the desk stared upon him, mocking his bodily weakness and futile enthusiasms and make him loathe himself for his own mad and filthy orgies.

But enthusiasm has given us yet another linguistic shift; it has been formed into the verb to enthuse. The verb is much derided. Style maven Bryan Garner says it “is a widely criticized back-formation avoided by writers and speakers who care about the language. Even the OED, in an entry written in 1891, calls it “an ignorant back-formation.” But the verb is older than many may think.

It’s first recorded in 1827, in a letter by botanist David Douglas:

My humble exertions will I trust convey and enthuse, and draw attention to the beautifully varied verdure of N.W. America.

Douglas was a Scotsman who traveled and spent many years in the Pacific Northwest of North America. Enthuse is distinctly North American, and it tends to be used in more informal registers. Use of the verb is becoming more common, and it is inching its way into more formal contexts. So despite the best efforts of language purists, it has been making steady progress over the last two centuries.

That’s quite a journey in a mere four centuries, from religious ecstasy to boozing it up and sowing one’s wild oats, with detours into fads and gushing praise.


Sources:

Garner, Bryan A.; Garner’s Modern American Usage, third edition; s.v. enthuse, vb.; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

Oxford English Dictionary, second edition; s.v. enthusiasm, n., enthuse, v.; 1989.

Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage; s.v. enthuse; Springfield: Merriam-Webster, 1994.

dirigible

6 May 2017

Today, the word dirigible is almost always used as a noun, referring to a zeppelin-type airship, and I always had it in my head that the word was related to rigid, a reference to the rigid frame of such an aircraft. But that is not the case. The word began life as an adjective meaning capable of being directed or steered. It was formed from the Latin verb dirigere, meaning to direct, steer, or guide. So a dirigible is a steerable balloon.

The adjective dates to the late sixteenth century but in the 1880s began to be applied specifically to balloons. By 1907 the word was being used as a noun to refer to Ferdinand von Zeppelin’s airships.

Cf. airshipblimpzeppelin.


Source:

Oxford English Dictionary, second edition, 1989, s. v. dirigible, adj. and n.

computer

23 August 2019

Computer has a rather straightforward etymology, although its usage may be a bit surprising. The word was originally applied to people, not machines.

Computer is derived from the verb to compute + -er, a standard suffix that denotes a person that does the task of the attached verb. The verb to compute comes to us from Norman French and in turn from the Latin computare, meaning to calculate. The verb appears in English by the late sixteenth century. So, a computer is one who calculates, and the noun appears in English by the early seventeenth century. From Richard Braithwaite’s 1613 Yong Mans Gleanings:

I haue read the truest computer of Times, and the best Arithmetician that euer breathed, and he reduceth thy dayes into a short number.

And many of these human computers were women, as calculation was considered mundane and repetitive work, beneath the dignity of men to perform, despite the fact that such calculations were often highly complex, requiring a high degree of mathematical skill.

Computer was being applied to machines by the mid nineteenth century. From Phemie’s Temptation, an 1869 novel by Marian Harland (the pen name of Mary Virginia Terhune):

[Phemie] plunged anew into the column of figures. [...] Her pen was slowly traversing the length of the page, at an elevation of a quarter of an inch above the paper, her eyes following the course of the nib, as if it were the index of a patent computer.

The use of the modifier patent indicates that this mechanical sense is relatively new, and that readers would be accustomed to thinking of computers as people, not machines.

The use of computer to refer to a programmable, electronic, calculating machine appears shortly after World War II. The exact date is uncertain. During the war, the US and Britain made use of calculating machines to crack Axis codes, and the word computer was used to denote these machines. Most were mechanical apparatuses, but a few were electronic, although not yet fully programmable like a present-day electronic computer. In the early citations of the word’s use to denote an electronic machine, it’s often difficult to determine if the word is used for a mechanical or an electronic device.

For example, in 1945 mathematician John von Neumann wrote:

Since the device is primarily a computer, it will have to perform the elementary operations of arithmetic most frequently.

Here he seems to be referring to a mechanical computer, saying the electronic device will primarily serve the function of a mechanical device. But in 1946, Bell Labs researcher George Stiblitz wrote:

If the computer is such that new formulas are easily set up in it, it may be economical to use it in the solution of 5 or 10 problems.

Here Stiblitz is referring to a programmable, electronic device. And by 1947 the term digital computer appeared in the journal Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to Computation. But by 1950, the term was, without modification, widely understood to refer to the programmable electronic devices we’re familiar with today. From Philosophical Magazine of that year:

The problem of constructing a computing routine or “program” for a modern general purpose computer which will enable it to play chess.


Source:

Oxford English Dictionary, third edition, June 2008, s. v. computer, n., compute, v.

club sandwich

3 August 2019

The club sandwich, or club house sandwich, as it is usually prepared today, consists of three slices of bread, between which is layered turkey or chicken, ham or bacon, lettuce, tomato, and mayonnaise. It is typically served quartered and held together by cocktail sticks.

But why club? How did it get its name? The answer is an unsatisfactory “we don’t know.” The sandwich originated in one or another social club or perhaps on the club cars of trains. The exact origin has been lost in the mists of time, but we do know that it originated in the United States at the turn of the twentieth century.

The earliest use of club sandwich that can be precisely dated comes from the New York Evening World of November 18, 1889:

Have you tried the Union Club sandwich yet? Two toasted slices of Graham bread, with a layer of turkey or chicken and ham between them, served warm.

But before we declare the Union Club of New York as the originator of the sandwich, there is this from the menu of Kinsley’s Restaurant in Chicago, also probably from 1889 (the date is somewhat uncertain):

Sandwiches—Club

Club sandwiches start popping up on a lot of restaurant menus from about this date. (Menus often aren’t dated, so this makes a precise chronology difficult.) There is also this one from the Lehigh Valley Railroad from about 1890:

Club Sandwich, Double 50 cents, single 30 cents

If the sandwich arose on the railroad, as opposed to in a social club, then then the club in the name would probably refer to the club car of a train.

And by 1893 the sandwich had reached the Pacific Coast, as the Woodland Daily Democrat of 18 May of that year makes reference to a “Bohemian Club sandwich,” a reference to the Bohemian Club of San Francisco.

These early versions were not as complex as the sandwich we know today. Here is a description of one from the Bucks County Gazette of Pennsylvania from 27 December 1894:

Club Sandwiches.—These are very tasty for after-theatre suppers, and are made of very thin white bread and butter, with the cold white meat of chicken, salted and peppered and laid on a leaf of lettuce, between the bread. Again, chopped green peppers or capers may be sprinkled over the chicken when the lettuce is omitted.

The triple-decker club sandwich that we know today was in place by the 1940s. Here’s a recipe from the US Department of Agriculture from 1942:

Club Sandwich
Toast
Lettuce
Cooked bacon or ham
Cold sliced chicken
Large, ripe, skinned tomatoes, sliced thin
Thick salad dressing
Radishes, olives, or pickles
Make double-decker sandwiches with slices of toasted bread from which the crust has been removed and the other ingredients arranged in layers of lettuce, bacon or ham, chicken, and tomato, with enough salad dressing to moisten. Insert toothpicks to hold the sandwiches together and garnish with crisp lettuce and radishes, olives, or pickles.


Source:

Barrypopik.com, retrieved 3 August 2019.

Meat…for Thrifty Meals, Farmers’ Bulletin no. 1908, US Department of Agriculture, 1942, 36.

butler

8 August 2019

butler is the chief servant in a household. The word comes to us from Anglo-Norman, the variety of French spoken in England following the Norman Conquest. The Anglo-Norman word was buteiller, a cup-bearer or servant who served wine. The word ultimately comes from the medieval Latin buticularius. It is cognate with the word bottle, which is from the Anglo-Norman botel and the medieval Latin buticula

The role of a butler has shifted over the centuries. Once simply a cupbearer, the butler would go on to acquire responsibility a household’s wine cellar, and eventually to become the chief servant.

Butler is recorded as early as c. 1300, when the poem Kyng Alisaunder in the manuscript Oxford, Bodleian Library, Laud Misc. 622 has:

Alisaundre [...] afenge faire þat present, And departed [...] Sum to kniȝttes [...] Sum mareschales and botlers, To ȝoman, page, and joglers.

(Alexander [...] received those present according to degree, and [they] departed [...] some to knights [...] some stewards and butlers, to yeoman, pages, and jugglers.)


Sources:

Middle English Dictionary, University of Michigan, 2014, s. v. boteler.

Oxford English Dictionary, second edition, 1989, s. v. butler, n.

Oxford English Dictionary, third edition, June 2016, s. v. bottle, n.3