Haggard Hawks and Paltry Poltroons · the Origins of English in Ten Words

- Authors
- Jones, Paul Anthony
- Publisher
- Constable & Robinson
- Tags
- humanities , language , linguistics , humour , non-fiction , arts & disciplines
- ISBN
- 9781472108067
- Date
- 2013-10-17T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.37 MB
- Lang
- en
What do the following ten words all have in common - haggard, mews, codger, arouse, musket, poltroon, gorge, allure, pounce and turn-tail? All fairly familiar and straightforward words, after a little digging into their histories it turns out that all of them derive from falconry: the adjective haggard described an adult falcon captured from the wild; mews were the enclosures hawks were kept in whilst moulting; codger is thought to come from 'cadger', the member of a hunting party who carried the birds' perches, and so on. This, essentially, is what this book is all about - it collects together hundreds of the most intriguing, surprising and little known histories and etymologies of a whole host of English words.