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Pets - General & Miscellaneous, Animals - General & Miscellaneous, Folklore & Mythology - By Subject, English Etymology
Dog Days and Dandelions by Martha Barnette — book cover

Dog Days and Dandelions

by Martha Barnette
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Overview

From apian (like a bee) to zodiac (little-animals circle), a word book that spots the animal origins of words and names

There are mice in your muscles, and blackbirds in your merlot. Behind adulation is a dog's wagging tail. Peculiar houses a herd of cattle. Grubby is crawling with bugs. Wordhound Martha Barnette collects more than 300 common (and a few not-so-common) words that have surprising animal roots. Tracing word origins back to ancient Greek and Latin as well as to European roots and American slang, the entries offer a guided tour through literature, science, folklore, politics, and more—with a wilderness of animal meanings at every turn.

For fledgling word sleuths as well as those who fawn over etymologies, this is a delightful smorgasbord for writers, students, and word lovers.

About the Author, Martha Barnette

Martha Barnette is the author of two previous books about word origins, A Garden of Words and Ladyfingers and Nun's Tummies. Based in Louisville, Kentucky, she writes a daily word-origins newsletter for thousands of subscribers.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

"Animals lurk everywhere in our language," declares Barnette, the author of two previous books for word lovers, A Garden of Words and Ladyfingers and Nun's Tummies. From origins that are immediately apparent (grubby refers to grubs, and lousy to lice), to others that might take a little thought (burrito means little donkey, vermicelli translates as little worms), all the way to influences only an etymologist would know (bombastic comes from the Old French bombace, meaning soft padding, which in turn came from bsmbyx, the ancient Greek word for silkworm), Barnette offers a sprightly compendium of the animal kingdom's impact on the king's English. "There's a little snake coiled inside the word rankle," "a 'porker' in porcelain" and "a pair of oxen trudging round and round, grinding grain for all eternity" in halo, she writes, and, unsurprisingly, "an oversize insect skittering about inside the word lobster." Arranged alphabetically, the 300-plus entries make for good browsing, and readers with a penchant for odd and underused words, such as myrmidon (an unprincipled lackey) and musteline (resembling a weasel) will find them aplenty here. (Feb.) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2003
Publisher
New York : St. Martin's Press, 2003.
Pages
256
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312280727

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