687: addiction and diction Oct 25, 2016
686: scotch Oct 24, 2016
685: confide, confident, & confidant(e) Oct 23, 2016
684: Jacquerie Oct 24, 2016
683: Lost Languages Oct 21, 2016
682: munich and berlin Oct 20, 2016
681: termite Oct 19, 2016
680: awake versus awaken Oct 18, 2016
679: -nik Oct 17, 2016
678: second Oct 16, 2016
For most words, there is a reason that people use them, especially if the word can mean more than one idea. A second is called such because it is the third division of periods of time within a day...sort of. The first is a division of the day into two sets of twelve hours, which was devised at least a few thousand years ago. The Greeks took this originally Egyptian model, defined the hours more precisely, and then divided that further into minutes and seconds, more or less as we know them today. The term 'second' comes in because it is the second sexagesimal division: a sixtieth of a sixtieth of an hour. 'Minute' also comes from the concept of division, as it comes from the Latin for 'lessen'. For more on 'minute', see this post.
677: snob Oct 15, 2016
676: saccade Oct 14, 2016
675: artifice and artifact Oct 13, 2016
674: Neck and Foot (Many Meanings) Oct 12, 2016
673: invective Oct 11, 2016
672: bum and fudge Oct 10, 2016
671: grim and grimace Oct 9, 2016
670: flick Oct 8, 2016
It is easy to think that words and language were simply made up arbitrarily, which in terms of phonetics is for the most part true, even though in terms of meaning it rarely is; usually things are drawn in from other sources. A flick, for example, such as in 'chick flick' or the company, 'Netflix' comes from 'flick', has no real-world association, but that word used to be closer to the experience of viewing films. Early movies were recorded at a mere 16 frames per second, and to avoid blurriness as the frames pass by on a reel, there is a shutter, which at the time was so slow that movies actually appeared to flicker. Even 'flick' is not arbitrary; the 'fl-' in the beginnings of words such as 'flash', 'flame', flare', 'flip’, and many others is indicative of rapid motion. For more on 'fl-' words in Indoeuropean languages, see: /stonewordfacts/2016/09/636-black-blanc-and-blanco-sep-4-2016.html