Devious Derivations : Popular Misconceptions -- and More Than 1,000 True Origins of Common Words and Phrases by Hugh Rawson (1993, Hardcover)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherCrown Publishing Group, T.H.E.
ISBN-100517580667
ISBN-139780517580660
eBay Product ID (ePID)1269720

Product Key Features

Number of Pages245 Pages
Publication NameDevious Derivations : Popular Misconceptions -- and More Than 1,000 True Origins of Common Words and Phrases
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year1993
SubjectLinguistics / Etymology
TypeTextbook
AuthorHugh Rawson
Subject AreaNon-Classifiable, Language Arts & Disciplines
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Weight18.3 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN92-034135
Reviews"There is no more avid, intrepid, and skilled word hunter at work today than Hugh Rawson. In Devious Derivations, he cuts through the tangle of confusing word origins and helps us discover who we are and whence we came." -- Richard Lederer, "Looking at Language" "This volume should take a place alongside that old favorite, Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable -- close to the dining room table where they both can be turned to whenever mealtimes dissolve into etymological arguments." -- Washington Post Book World "Hugh Rawson made a lot of literary friends with his previous Wicked Words (if you missed it, find a copy quick) and his newest foray into the English language is an absolute delight, the fruits of a learned man who has a gleam in his eye." -- Coast Book Review Service From the Trade Paperback edition.
SynopsisIn this marvelously entertaining book, word maven Hugh Rawson rounds up 1,000 words and phrases whose origins are not what you might expect. Some wiseacre (the word has nothing to do with land measure) may have told you that a tip is given to a waiter "to insure promptness," or that S.O.S. stands for "Save Our Ship," or that hooker is a tribute to the character of Joseph Hooker, the Civil War general. Like hundreds of popular etymologies, these oft-repeated accounts are just too good to be true. Now Mr. Rawson punctures the myths, gives the real derivations, and along the way provides many insights into how language works. From the Trade Paperback edition.
LC Classification NumberPE1584.R38 1994
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