Popular Words Invented by Authors | Otherwords - YouTube

Channel: Storied

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You might have heard the uproar in March 2021 over the decision to stop publishing six Dr.
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Seuss books for racially insensitive imagery.
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While this may not be a tremendous loss to literature, one of those books could claim
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a notable linguistic accomplishment.
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If I Ran the Zoo, published in 1950, contains the first written instance of the word “nerd.”
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When authors create words for a one-time usage, they’re known as nonce words.
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Though it kind of sounds like “nonsense,” the word nonce is actually a cognate of “once,”
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as in, words to be used only once.
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However, sometimes these single-usage words can pick up steam, becoming neologisms, terms
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that are still new and limited to certain fields.
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And perhaps some of those will eventually make their way into our shared vocabulary
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as full-fledged words, becoming so common that we totally forget their literary origins.
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I’m Dr. Erica Brozovsky and this is Otherwords!
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Okay, if we’re talking about authors creating words, we have to address the 600 lb. gorilla,
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the Bard himself, William Shakespeare.
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At one time, he was credited with inventing over 2,000 English words, though that number
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has dwindled in recent years.
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Turns out, he was such a prolific writer that his works were just the first
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place many scholars had seen these words, but it’s likely many were already in common
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usage at the time.
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For instance, "dwindle" was first seen in Henry IV Part 1.
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Shakespeare’s lexical creativity was more about finding new and ingenious ways to use
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existing words.
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He would combine them, giving us bedroom, outbreak, and cold-blooded.
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He would change nouns into verbs, so gossip and elbow went from being things to actions
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you could do.
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And he was absolutely extravagant with prefixes and suffixes, sprinkling un-’s and -able’s
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all over the place.
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Not all of his creations caught on, but he churned out verbal innovations with such regularity,
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it's not surprising that we still use many today.
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Well before Shakespeare, the English poet Geoffrey Chaucer, famous for his Canterbury
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Tales, wanted to describe the light, tremulous call an encaged bird makes as it yearns for
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freedom, and came up with the onomatopoeia "twitter."
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700 years later, we’re the encaged birds, tweeting our takes into the void.
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In 1667, John Milton published Paradise Lost, an epic poem and origin story of the ultimate
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arch-villain, Satan.
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He envisioned Hell having a capital city, which he named Pandemonium.
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The meaning has shifted since then to describe a state of chaos where all hell has broken
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loose, but the original, literal definition was “the place where all the demons lived.”
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By the way, arch-villain is one of Shakespeare’s creations.
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A couple hundred years later, Sir Walter Scott was writing his chivalric romance Ivanhoe,
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considered a major influence on the modern version of the Robin Hood story.
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He wanted a new term for hired mercenaries--soldiers without loyalty to any banner, whose lances
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were free to fight for whoever could pay the most.
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So he called them freelancers, and the term caught on to describe people who work job
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to job for different clients.
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It’s definitely more colorful than the lackluster “contractor,” but still a weirdly violent
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term for someone who designs corporate logos.
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Oh, and lackluster?
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Another one of Shakespeare’s.
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Lewis Carroll’s poem Jabberwocky is a multitudinous sea of nonce words.
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Okay, Will, we get it.
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Many were created by melding two existing words together to get something that almost
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sounds like a word you already know.
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For instance, chortle is a combination of chuckle and snort, and galumph was supposedly
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a triumphant gallop.
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Both of these words managed to transcend Wonderland’s borders into the English dictionary.
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I guess if you buy that many lottery tickets, you’re gonna win something.
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When preparing his 1840 volume, The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, Reverend William
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Whewell wanted a single word to refer to a practitioner of the scientific method and
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came up with "scientist."
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Just think: if he had gone a different way, we might be calling them sciencers or sciencesmiths, or...
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Scientician!
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Uh...
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Speaking of scientists, when physicist Murray Gell-Mann theorized the existence of subatomic
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particles in 1964, he named them quarks, inspired by a nonce word that James Joyce came up with
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for his 1939 novel Finnegan's Wake.
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Like most of Joyce’s writing, I have no idea
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what the original meaning was supposed to be.
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In 1920, Karel Čapek wrote a science fiction play about humanoid machines constructed to
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perform manual tasks.
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He borrowed a Czech term for forced labor, and "robot" quickly left the world of science
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fiction to describe real-life automated machines that work for us.
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On a related note, most people think that "droid" originated in 1977’s Star Wars, but
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its first appearance was actually in the 1952 short story
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“Robots of the World! Arise!” by Mari Wolf.
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I don’t know if this counts as a new word though, since it’s really just a shortening
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of android, which comes from the Greek for “man-shaped.”
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Also, Lucasfilm trademarked the term so if another author wanted to use it, they’d
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have to cough up some Republic credits for it.
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Moving from sci-fi to fantasy, J.R.R.
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Tolkien used the word tween to describe the period in a hobbit’s life between childhood
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and adulthood, roughly 20 to 33.
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Today, we use it to refer to pre-adolescence, because of its similarity to “teen.”
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Since teenager wasn’t really popularized until the late 1950s, Tolkien was probably
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just shortening “between,” or combining it with “twenties.”
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However, hobbits did live over a hundred years, so maybe the definition hasn't changed that
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much.
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One more scientician for you!
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In 1976’s The Selfish Gene, biologist Richard Dawkins wanted to express how culture could
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be shaped by a process not unlike natural selection--that ideas and thoughts could survive
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and replicate based on their fitness.
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He needed a word for a unit of culture that could spread, so he took the Greek word for
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imitation and condensed it to sound like the word “gene.”
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Though now we mostly use this term to mean visual jokes that you post online, it originally
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meant any shareable idea, style or behavior, from religious beliefs, to fashion trends,
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to new words.
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That means the word “meme” is a meme.
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Like biological genetics, it can be very difficult to discern why some nonce words survived and
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spread while others didn’t.
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Why did nerd become a household word, and not its neighbors, preep, proo and nerkle?
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Maybe it just sounds better, though some suspect Seuss simply stumbled on a slang
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for nut that was already becoming popular.
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It’s impossible to know today.
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Yes, Will, you can take credit for "household word."
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One thing is certain .
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A single writer can coin a word, but they can’t make it popular.
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All of us, collectively, through our behavior and interactions, get to decide what becomes
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a real word and what stays literary nonce-sense.
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But its first appearance was actually...
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(laughs)
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But it's first appea-- (laughs)
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Ah, I gotta totally make sure I'm not crying. K.