Naming the Planets, Part 1

11 November 2005

A question to the Wordorigins.org discussion forum this past week asked about the origins of the names of the planets. The "official" names of objects in the solar system are assigned by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), a global association of astronomers.

The IAU follows several conventions in naming planets and moons, the main ones being that planets are given names of Roman mythological beings and moons are given Greek mythological names associated with the Greek equivalent of the Roman god. Moons tend be named after goddesses, while planets, with the exception of Venus, are all male gods. Many of these names did not originate with the IAU, but have borne the names of these deities dating back into antiquity. The naming conventions are not rigid and there are exceptions. For example, Shakespearean names are assigned to moons of Uranus and in recent years the occasional Norse or Inuit mythological name has been assigned to newly discovered objects.

The largest and central object in the solar system is the sun, the nearest star to the Earth. Sun is an Old English word from a common Germanic root. Our local star is also known as Sol, the Latin name, which has been in English use since c.1450. The associated adjective is solarHelio-, after helios, the Greek name for the sun, has been used as a combining form, as in heliocentric, since 1804.

Mercury, the planet closest to the sun and the fastest to orbit, is named after the Roman messenger god. The name in English usage dates back to Old English. The adjective is Mercurian, c.1576. The ancient Greeks called the planet by two names, even though they knew it to be one object, Apollo when seen in the morning and Hermes, the Greek counterpart to the Roman god, when seen in the evening.

Venus, the second planet from the sun and Earth’s nearest neighbor, is named after the Roman goddess of love. English usage of the name dates to c.1290. The adjective is Venusian, 1874. Early uses of the adjectival form are primarily found in science fiction, with astronomical use dating from 1913. The ancient Greeks called it by two names, Eosphorus, morning star, and Hesperus, evening star, although, like Mercury, they knew it was one body.

Earth dates back to Old English and is from a common Germanic root. The root is probably related to the Greek era, but no other non-Germanic cognates are known and the exact relationship with the Greek word is uncertain. Earth was not used in the sense of a planet, like the others, until c.1400. The adjective is Terran, 1953, and is most commonly found in science fiction. The adjective is after Terra, the Latin name for earth.

The earth is the first planet to have a natural satellite, called the moon. The word is found in Old English, from a common Germanic root. Moon has been used to denote a satellite of a planet other than earth since 1665. The earth’s moon is sometimes known as Luna, the Latin name in English use since before 1529. The adjective is lunar, 1626. Unlike the other astronomical names, earth and moon are often not capitalized.

Mars, the fourth planet from the sun, is named after the Roman god of war. The name has been in English use since c.1300. The adjective is Martian, c.1395. Mars has two small satellites, Phobos (fear) and Deimos (panic), the names of Ares’ sons, Ares being the Greek counterpart to the Roman diety.

Between Mars and Jupiter are the asteroids, named by astronomer William Herschel in 1802, from the Greek aster (star) + -oid (like). There are probably over a million of these rocks, of which several hundred thousand have been given alphanumeric designations by the IAU. Some asteroids are named. The largest is Ceres, after the Greek god of agriculture. At 933 km in diameter, Ceres contains 25% of the mass of all the asteroids combined.

Jupiter is the fifth and largest planet, named after the Roman king of the gods. The astronomical name has been in English use since c.1290. The planet is sometimes called Jove, c.1374, the poetical name of Jupiter. The adjective is Jovian, 1794

Most of Jupiter’s moons are named after paramours of Zeus, the Greek equivalent to the Roman god. It is well that Zeus enjoyed the ladies, because Jupiter has 27 moons. The Jovian moons are:

  • Metis, after first wife of Zeus, discovered in 1979 by astronomer Stephen Synnott of the Voyager 1 project.

  • Adrastea, a daughter of Jupiter, discovered in 1979 by David Jewett of the Voyager 1 project.

  • Amalthea, the nymph who nursed Jupiter, discovered by Edward Barnard in 1892.

  • Thebe, nymph daughter of river god Asopus, discovered in 1979 by Synnott.

  • Io is the innermost of the Galilean moons, so-called because they were independently discovered by Galileo the German astronomer Simon Marius in 1610. Named after a lover of Zeus who was turned into a heifer to hide her from Hera, his jealous wife, Marius named this and all the Galilean moons.

  • Europa, was another lover of Zeus, is the next Galilean moon.

  • Ganymede, the largest moon in the solar system, has a diameter larger than Mercury although smaller than that planet in mass. It is named for the Trojan boy who, because of his beauty, was made cupbearer to the gods.

  • Callisto is named after a nymph lover of Zeus who was turned into a bear by Hera. In the myth, Zeus placed her in the sky as the constellation Ursa Major. Callisto is the outermost of the Galilean moons.

  • Leda is the smallest of Jovian satellites. It is named for the queen of Sparta, who was the mother of Polydeuces (Pollux) and Helen of Troy by Zeus and of Castor and Clytemnestra by her mortal husband. Astronomer Charles Kowal discovered the moon in 1974. Leda and the next three satellites may be the remains of an asteroid captured by Jupiter and broken up.

  • Himalia is named for the mother of three of Zeus’ children. It was discovered by Charles Perrine in 1904.

  • Lysithea was another lover of Zeus. The satellite was discovered by Seth Nicolson in 1938.

  • Elara, was a lover of Zeus. Discovered by Perrine in 1904

  • Ananke, was yet another lover of Zeus, the mother of Adrastea. Nicolson discovered this one in 1951

  • Carme was also discovered by Nicolson, but in 1938. It was named for a lover of Zeus, of course.

  • Pasiphae was the wife of King Minos of Crete and mother of the Minotaur. It was discovered by Philibert Melotte in 1908

  • Even Zeus occasionally struck out. Sinope was a woman who spurned the god’s advances. Nicolson discovered this one too in 1914

  • Eleven small moons, recently discovered, were given names by IAU in 2004, a mix of daughters and lovers of the god:

    • Callirrhoe, stepdaughter

    • Themisto, lover

    • Megaclite, lover

    • Taygete, lover

    • Chaldene, lover

    • Harpalyke, lover

    • Kalyke, lover

    • Iocaste, lover

    • Erinome, lover

    • Isonoe, lover

    • Praxidike, lover

    • Autonoe, lover

    • Thyone, lover

    • Hermippe, lover

    • Aitne, lover

    • Eurydome, lover

    • Euanthe, lover

    • Euporie, daughter

    • Orthosie, daughter

    • Sponde, daughter

    • Kale, daughter

    • Pasithee, daughter

Our look at the names of the planets and moons will continue next week, starting with Saturn, the sixth planet.

What Are You Looking Up?

4 November 2005

Merriam Webster reports that the word most often looked up in its online dictionary during the month of September was refugee. Two other Katrina-related words made the top twenty, levee, coming in at number four and hurricane at eleven.

Other words in the top twenty indicate that school is back in session, with students looking up words for assignments. Numbers two and three were effect and affectMetaphor and irony come in at five and six. Paradigm and rhetoric also make the list.

Scalito & Scooter

4 November 2005

Two nicknames have been in the news as of late. The first is Scalito, a name given to Samuel Alito, President Bush’s latest nominee to replace Sandra Day O’Connor on the Supreme Court. The nickname is a play on two names, Alito’s and that of Justice Antonin Scalia. Both judges are very conservative and the blending of their names emphasizes the similarities in their respective judicial philosophies.

Alito’s nickname is just about a year old, or at least that’s as far back as the blog search engine Technorati (http://www.technorati.com) can trace it. On 4 November 2004, the blog Serendipity contained this fragment, "With old Rehnquist’s health in decline, rumor has it that Samuel A. Alito Jr… been nicknamed Scalito because is just like Antonin Scalia." Unfortunately, that blog no longer exists and all that is left is this fragment returned by Technorati. But even without the entire context, it is clear that the blog’s author did not coin the term.

The use of the nickname Scalito is pretty much restricted to those who oppose Alito’s confirmation to a seat on the court. It is not a flattering nickname. Besides connoting that Alito is not an independent thinker, the –ito is Spanish suffix meaning little, a little Scalia as it were.

Not all nicknames are pejorative, however. Another Bush administration nickname in the news is Scooter, the moniker if Vice President Cheney’s former chief of staff, I. Lewis Libby. Libby was indicted for perjury, lying to federal officials, and obstruction of justice in the CIA leak scandal. Libby uses the nickname himself, apparently preferring it to his given name—so much so that no one is really quite sure what the "I" stands for. At various times it is given as IrvIrve, or Irving.

And the origin of his Scooter nickname is also in doubt. At various times Libby himself has told different stories about the origin. He has said his father dubbed him that as a baby after watching him scoot about his crib. On other occasions he has claimed that it was a childhood comparison with Yankee shortstop Phil Scooter Rizzuto. "I had the range, but not the arm," claimed Libby at one point.

We all know what a nickname is, but many of us probably don’t know how that word came to be. Why is it nick? The answer is in something linguists call metanalysis. The word was originally ekenameeke (additional) + name, and dates to the beginning of the 14th century. About 140 years later it had become nekename. Through the process of metanalysis, the N in the article an migrated to the noun, an ekename became a nekename.

Nickname is not the only example of metanalysis. Napkin is another example. The process works in the other direction as well. Orange was once naranj and apron was naperon.

The Bush administration is no stranger to nicknames. The president is, of course, Dubya (a reference to his middle initial W) or 43 (he is the 43rd president; his dad is 41). Bush, himself, is rather famous for bestowing nicknames on people. Russian President Vladimir Putin is the unflattering Pootie-Poot and British Prime Minister Tony Blair is Landslide. His advisor Karl Rove is alternately Boy Genius or Turd Blossom, depending on how the president feels about him that day. Colin Powell is The World’s Greatest Hero, a name that can be either positive or negative depending on tone of voice. Vice President Cheney is Big Time, a reference to a famous incident involving a four-letter word. Condoleezza Rice is Guru, after her tutoring in foreign policy, and not as the comic strip Doonesbury joked Brown Sugar. Three people share the nickname Big O, Senator Olympia Snowe, former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, and TV personality Bill O’Reilly. New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd is The Cobra, evidently for her venomous columns attacking the administration. Former Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay was Kenny Boy, but Bush hasn’t been that chummy with him of late.

It is doubtful that Bush ever referred to Judge Alito as Scalito, although he has been known to call Harriet Miers Bulldog In Size 6 Shoes.

Trafalgar & The Language of the Age of Sail, Part 2

28 October 2005

Two hundred years ago last week, on 21 October 1805, the Battle of Trafalgar was fought off the coast of Spain. A fleet of 27 Royal Navy ships under the command of Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson defeated a fleet of 33 French and Spanish ships under the command of Vice Admiral Pierre Charles Silvestre de Villeneuve. In the battle, 22 French and Spanish ships were captured or sunk. No British ships were lost. Villeneuve was captured and eventually paroled back to France. Upon his return he was found dead in his room at an inn, stabbed in the chest six times. The death was ruled a suicide.

Because of the decisive victory at Trafalgar, even though the Napoleonic wars continued for another ten years, the threat of Napoleon’s invading England was ended that October. But more than this, Trafalgar cemented British control of seas for a hundred years and bestowed on the Royal Navy an aura of invincibility.

Regular readers of the Wordorigins site and those who’ve read Word Myths are familiar with CANOE, the jocular Conspiracy to Attribute Nautical Origins to Everything, the habit of naval enthusiasts to find nautical etymologies for all sorts of words and phrases. We’re all familiar with the more common terms that are falsely given nautical origins. But there are a large number of words and phrases that do have nautical origins or relate to the Age of Sail. So in honor of the battle fought 200 years ago, here is a second tranche of words and phrases with true nautical connections.

battenn., a strip of wood used to secure tarpaulins over hatches in bad weather, 1769. to batten downv., to fasten with battens, 1823. A variant of baton.

broadsiden., 1. the side of a ship, 1591; the simultaneous firing of all the guns on one side of a ship, 1597.

cross the Tv., to bring one’s line of battle across the front or rear of the enemy’s line, allowing your fleet to fire the entire weight of its broadsides while simultaneously limiting the enemy’s ability to bring guns to bear. Nelson crossed the T at Trafalgar.

hulkn., 1. a ship, c.1000; 2. the hull of a decommissioned ship, used as a storehouse, prison, or for other purposes, 1671; 3. a large person, 1597. From the Old English hulc.

hulln., the body of a ship, 1571. Of obscure origin. Possibly the same word as hull, the shell or husk of seed, but this is not certain.

Kiss me, Hardyc.phr., ascribed to be the final words of Nelson. Hardy was the captain of the HMS Victory.

line of battlen., a fleet of ships of the largest size, usually 74 guns or more, also used adjectivally, 1695. From the battle formation of a line, allowing all the ships to deploy their full broadside.

loblollyn., a thick gruel used especially to feed medical patients aboard ship. Also, loblolly boy and loblolly man to refer to a naval surgeon’s assistants. The lob- is probably echoic of a boiling stew. –lolly is probably from the Devon dialectal term for a broth or soup.

logn., 1. a device used for determining a ship’s speed consisting of a block of wood attached to a line that is tossed overboard and the line measured over a fixed period, 1574; 2. clipped form of log book, a journal used to record the course and speed of a ship, 1825.

man-of-warn., a warship, 1485. From the use of the term to mean a warrior or soldier.

mastn., a pole fixed to the keel of a ship used to support sails, Old English from a common Germanic root.

master-at-arms, n., a petty officer charged with maintaining discipline aboard a ship, 1732.

midshipmann., the highest rank of non-commissioned officer, a naval cadet, 1662. From the station of this officer amidships.

nauticaladj., relating to sailing and the sea, 1552. From the Middle French nautique, ultimately from the Greek nautikos, sailor.

orlopn., the lowest deck of a ship, 1420. From the Dutch ouerloop, passage or walkway.

quarter-deckn., a deck that extends for approximately a quarter of the ship’s length, especially the upper deck extending from the stern to the after-mast from which the captain commands the vessel, 1627.

rakev., to incline from the perpendicular, especially to extend beyond the keel in the bow or stern, 1627; also n., the upper part of a ship’s hull that extends beyond the keel in the bow or stern, 1626. Of obscure origin.

rakev., to sweep a ship’s deck with shot during battle, 1630. From the Old Norse raka, to scrape, the same root as the gardening implement.

reefn., a section of a sail that can be rolled or folded to reduce the amount of sail exposed to the wind, 1390. From the Middle English riff or refe, ultimately from the Old Norse rif, which may be a variant of rib. Also a verb, meaning to reduce the size of a sail by means of a reef, 1667, from the noun.

rear admiraln., a flag officer ranking below vice admiral, so called because the officer commanded the rear portion of the line of battle, 1589.

ruddern., a flat board used to steer or propel a ship, c.725. From the Old English róder.

sailn., a piece of canvas or cloth used to catch wind and propel a vessel forward, c.888; v., to travel on water, propelled by the wind, c.893. From the Old English segel, ultimately from a common Germanic root that has no corresponding cognates in other language families.

scuttlebuttn., a cask of drinking water on board a ship, 1805; rumor, gossip, originally in US nautical usage, 1901. From scuttle, to cut a hole in and hence a cover for a hole, + butt, a cask.

ship of the linen., a ship large enough to sail in a line of battle, 1706.

skippern., the captain of a ship, 1390. From the Middle Dutch schipper.

skylarkv., to play or frolic, 1809. An allusion to playing high in the rigging, like a skylark bird singing while soaring at altitude.

sloopn., a one-masted, fore-and-aft rigged ship. From the Dutch sloep.

square-riggedadj., to affix the yards and sails perpendicularly to the masts, in contrast to a fore-and-aft rig, 1769.

sternn., the aft of a ship, c.1300. Originally, in reference to the rudder or steering gear located at the rear of the ship. Probably from the Old Norse stjórn, steering.

tap the admiralv., to surreptitiously drink alcohol from a cask. From the myth that the cask containing Nelson’s corpse was found half empty upon the return of HMS Victory to Portsmouth. Nelson’s corpse was preserved in a cask of spirits, but it is highly unlikely that sailors actually drank from it, the myth arising from a joke sometime after the battle.

Trafalgarn., cape on the south coast of Spain, between Cadiz and Gibraltar, near the site of the 1805 battle. From Arabic, either tarf-el-garb, western point, or taraf-al-aghar, pillar cave, a reference to the Pillars of Hercules.

waistn., the amidships portion of a ship, 1495. Hence waister, a sailor stationed in that part of the ship, 1815.

warp, v., to move a ship by hauling on a rope or warp, 1513.

weather gagen., a position windward of another ship, 1591. The ship that has the weather gage has the choice of whether to engage in battle or flee. The opposite of lee gage.

Dept. of Political Correctness

14 October 2005

Reuters today reports that a woman in Oldham, England has complained that she was upbraided by a policeman because she used the F-word--fat.

Mary Magilton, 54, suffered minor injuries when she was hit by a car in a hit-and-run incident. She had been standing on the pavement (sidewalk to us Americans) when a car driven by an unidentified woman jumped the curb and struck her. In describing the driver to the police, she used the word fat. At which point the police officer told her she should not use that word.

"I was given a frosty look and told I couldn’t say that. I could have said lardy, porky or podgy. But I wouldn’t dare use those words," said Magilton.

The Greater Manchester Police department confirmed that the incident report included the word fat. They also said if the officer did criticize Magilton, they were sure he was polite when he did it.