07 May 2015

Notes - Creator of Questions /

        You were up before sunrise to pick up the morning papers then you both had breakfast while reading. The leaves and other foliage are in full display by the seventh day of May. – Amorella

         0830 hours. I am awake but my body takes exception with a sundry of dull to active aches. We have sun and a blue sky and a multitude of cooing from nearby pigeons mixed with the sharp rather loud calls from our yard resident Carolina wrens.

         0843 hours. One of the delights of starting off on the Internet with BBC News is the diversity of topics. I love words. This article is on the election and serves for education and fun.

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BBC Magazine

The Election Vocabularist: Did the word parliament come from parabola?

By Trevor Timpson
BBC News

This is the day on which Britons vote for candidates seeking to become MPs. What is the history behind these words?

The word vote derives from the Latin votum, as is "vow" (which is what it means) and it is close kin to words denoting a religious dedication, such as votive and votary.

Until the 17th Century it was far better known in Scotland than in England, and it was in Scotland in the 16th Century that (sometimes spelt voit) it began to mean an expression of wish when a decision is taken or an appointment made.

A Scottish Act of 1585 provided that in county parliamentary elections "nane to have voit bot sik as hes fourtie shilling land in free-tennendry halden of the King".

At that time the word "voice" was common in England to mean a vote. Shakespeare's Coriolanus has a wearyingly long scene in which the Bard, in characteristic mob-deriding mood, examines whether the hero will get enough "voices" to become consul. "He has done nobly, and cannot go without any honest man's voice," one supporter cries. There is no hint that "votes" might be used instead.

Whether James VI told the English to start using "vote" when he took over as their king in 1603 is not known. Yet in the 17th Century English political writers such as Thomas Hobbes were happily using it as we do today.

Candidate in Latin is candidatus - which means "whitened" or "brightened".

One of its earliest uses in English is in Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, whose hero is offered a white robe and told "Be candidatus then and put it on, And help to set a head on headless Rome".

It comes from candidus meaning shining white, descended from an old word which gives us terms linked to purity and honesty, including candid and candour - and also to glowing and shining, like incandescent, and even burning, like incendiary, incense and candle.

Candidates wore togas which were coloured bright white, according to Isidore of Seville, a bishop writing in the 7th Century.
That is very late to describe a practice in classical Rome - but there are also hints in the writings of the satirist Persius, and in the name given to a speech made by Cicero when he was running for consul in 64BC - "Oratio in toga candida" or "Speech in a white toga".

Whitening togas is linked by Isidore and Persius with the practice of "ambitio" - literally "walking about" seeking support. We would call it canvassing. The practice was often frowned on in Rome as was "ambition" in English.

Isidore said "creta" was added to the toga, normally a natural woollen colour, to make it stand out, and this is usually taken to mean chalk. But it can also mean white clay, and perhaps the "pipeclay" which could be made into a paste, and was once used to whiten British soldiers' belts, is more likely.

Parliament is a word whose recent history is pretty straightforward, but whose early connections are quite surprising.

Obviously it comes from the word for "talk" in late Latin, related to the French parlez-vous. From the early Middle Ages the idea of a ruler holding a "parlement" or "parlamentum" - a discussion - shaded into the idea of the discussion meeting itself.

Trace it further back, and you discover that words starting with parl- are linked to the Spanish palabra, and our own "palaver" - which is thought to have been copied by English sailors from the Portuguese.

Further back we come to parable, meaning a saying - in English, more particularly, a story in the Bible with a second, moral meaning,. That gives a clue to its Greek original, which is parabola.

Now a parabola in English is a rather pleasing symmetrical curve, but originally in Greek it meant putting two things side by side - from para, as in "parallel", and ballo, meaning "throw" (think of "ballistic").

From there it meant a "comparison" and so a saying or proverb.
Selected and edited from http://www.bbcDOTcom/news/magazine-32273170

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         The blog is not about BBC News service, boy, though I understand your general love for words. You can hardly do better than an excellent dictionary to peruse at your leisure. – Amorella

         You completed forty minutes of exercises. Carol is about readying for the Blue Ash Retired Teachers’ Luncheon with Ann F. You are debating whether to mow or to mulch today. Debating doesn’t take much effort. – Amorella

         1127 hours. I was just thinking about “Dig” and the subplot on the ‘end of the world’ and how for anyone alive it wouldn’t make any difference on when the end of the world was because in a 120 years most if not all of us would be dead anyway. So, if the end of the world (literarily) were tomorrow then it would be like jumping 120 years in the future for any us alive presently. What difference is 120 years, that’s the difference. I can’t see for the Dead (in the story) it would make any difference at all. All the Dead would be together, so to speak or not speak I suppose. Certainly that would end the debate on whether to go back among the Living. The comic element would continue though unless the Dead are as asleep like Socrates conjectured. Then you could begin a new dream book for the dreaming among the Dead titled, Wake Up. Shoot that could hold as much terror or more than the title, End of the World. You have all those ‘who, what, when, why and how’ questions. Without the questions we could all rest at least another day or two. (1143)

         To you “Humor” is the Beginning of the Beyond as well as its Conclusion. – Amorella

         1145 hours. It is as long as you put the Physics, squeezed in between as a bellows to be played, accordion-like for whatever music or poetry that might be re-produced.

         Are you talking a kind of “Music of the Spheres” upgrade? – Amorella

         1151 hours. Well, I’d like to think some good would come out of all that effort and energy, I mean, the “Humor” would be better with some sort of purpose.

         For whom, boy? – Amorella

         1153 hours. For the Creator of Questions.


         Post. - Amorella

         As you are perplexed by what to title this post use "Creator of Questions". - Amorella

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