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         Word Origins:     more books (100)
  1. Word Origins: The Romance Of Language by Cecil Hunt, 2009-07-23
  2. Word Histories - A Glossary Of Unusual Word Origins by Wendell Herbruck, 2008-11-04
  3. Dubious Doublets: A Delightful Compendium of Unlikely Word Pairs of Common Origin, from Aardvark/Porcelain to Zodiac/Whiskey by Stewart Edelstein, 2003-02-28
  4. Deeds, Not Words: The Origins of Women's Philanthropy in the Russian Empire (Birmingham Slavonic Monographs) by Wendy Rosslyn, 2007-12
  5. What in the Word?: Origins of Words Dealing With People and Places by David Muschell, 1996-04
  6. 2000 AND THIRTEEN - vinyl lp. WILL TO LIVE - SLOW GROWTH - NATURAL FOODS - PHIL - ASPARAGUS - ORIGIN OF WORDS - GREAT INVENTIONS - ANCIENT POETRY, ETC.ETC. by CARL & MEL BROOKS REINER, 1973
  7. The Oxford Library of Words and Phrases in Three Volumes 1 Quotations 11proverbs III Word Origins by The Oxford University Press, 1990
  8. WORD ORIGINS by Wilfred Funk, 1978
  9. Concise dictionary of word origins by Adrian Room, 1996
  10. Is That What It Means: A Treasure Trove of Word Origins by Max, Jr. Oppenheimer, 2004-02
  11. The Noun in Biblical Armenian: Origin and Word Formation: With Special Emphasis on the Indo-European Heritage (Trends in Linguistics) (Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs) by Birgit Anette Olsen, 1999-03
  12. Bees' Knees and Barmy Armies: Origins of the Words and Phrases We Use Every Day by Harry Oliver, 2011-04-01
  13. Word Origins (Fun with English) by George Beal, 1995-03-20
  14. The foolish dictionary: An exhausting work of reference to un-certain English words, their origin, meaning, legitimate and illegitimate use, confused by a few pictures by Gideon Wurdz, 1905

81. Dictionary Of Word Origins; Author: Flavell, Linda; Author: Flavell, Roger H.; P
Dictionary of word origins Author Flavell, Linda; Author Flavell, Roger H. Paperback278 pages Published September 2000 Kyle Cathie Ltd ISBN 1856263924
http://www.opengroup.com/rabooks/185/1856263924.shtml

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Dictionary of Word Origins
Author: Flavell, Linda; Author: Flavell, Roger H.
Paperback
278 pages
Published: September 2000
Kyle Cathie Ltd ISBN: 1856263924 This item non-returnable. Order may not be canceled. This is a guide to the origins and histories of over 300 commonly used words. With entries from accolade to zoo, and mini-essays throughout on general topics, this should appeal to anyone interested in words and language. PRODUCT CODE: 1856263924 USA/Canada: US$ 16.70 Australia/NZ: A$ 34.70 Other Countries: US$ 23.10 convert to your currency Delivery costs included if your total order exceeds US$50. We do not charge your credit card until we ship your order. Government and corporate Purchase Orders accepted without prior account application. PLACE AN ORDER To prepare to buy this item click "add to cart" above. You can change or abandon your shopping cart at any time before checkout. CHECK ORDER STATUS Check on order progress and dispatch. CHANGE OR CANCEL YOUR ORDER Please E-mail us within one hour The NetStoreUSA website is operated by Open Communications, Inc

82. Water Roots - Word Origins - الجذور ا&
The summary for this Gujarati page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.schoolarabia.net/water_root/

Estonian
Russian
Estonian
Russian

83. Water Roots - Word Origins - الجذور ا&
The summary for this English page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.schoolarabia.net/water_root/water_root_a2.htm

Estonian
Russian Water Roots – Word Origins By Masami Kikuchi Mi Mina to Mi Water doo r Water gate to Mina Samurai Water Root Aka Dana Aka Aqua Acua Agua Fluid Arts Water Roots

84. Math Forum - Ask Dr. Math
Drexel dragon Donate to the Math Forum Associated Topics Dr. Math Home Search Dr. Math Equilateral, Isosceles, Scalene word origins.
http://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/55408.html

Associated Topics
Dr. Math Home Search Dr. Math
Equilateral, Isosceles, Scalene - Word Origins
Date: 12/09/2001 at 14:45:26 From: Julian Subject: Triangle history I need to find out about the origins of the scalene, isoceles, and equilateral triangles. How they were named? Why were they named that? http://mathforum.org/dr.math/ Associated Topics
Elementary Definitions

Elementary Geometry

Elementary Triangles and Other Polygons

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Middle School Triangles and Other Polygons

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Find items containing (put spaces between keywords):
Click only once for faster results:
[ Choose "whole words" when searching for a word like age. all keywords, in any order at least one, that exact phrase parts of words whole words Submit your own question to Dr. Math Math Forum Home Math Library Quick Reference ... Math Forum Search Ask Dr. Math TM http://mathforum.org/dr.math/

85. Accord Publishing -- Word Origins Calendar
The Word Origin Calendar ™. Words, Cliches, and Expressions. 2003Calendar. Ever wondered where everyday words, expressions, and
http://www.accordpublishing.com/word/word.htm
The Word Origin Calendar Words, Cliches, and Expressions 2003 Calendar Ever wondered where everyday words, expressions, and brand names come from such as "hoity-toity," "on easy street," "gung ho," and "Crayola "? If so, this is the calendar for you! Each day offers entertaining insight into the origin and development of the colorful words and phrases we all use. ISBN: 1-57939-121-4 Price: $10.95 Daily, 320 sheets, 5 1/4" x 5 1/2"
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86. Iroquois Creation Story - Word Origins
word origins and Pronunciation The word I used most often is Haudenoshaunee.That is the accepted ENGLISH (phonetic) spelling of
http://collections.ic.gc.ca/curriculum/iroquois/origin.htm

Digital Collections
Word Origins and Pronunciation The word I used most often is Haudenoshaunee. That is the accepted ENGLISH (phonetic) spelling of the word meaning the Iroquois of the Confederacy. To spell it in the language is to spell it Hotinon:shonni - I chose not to use it because it would be difficult for some people to pronounce. In the Mohawk language it is spelled and pronounced as Rotinon:shonni. These three words all mean the same thing. The first use of the word, Haudenoshaunee, is pronounced as it is spelled. I also made use of the word Kanienkehaka - that means people of the flint, or Mohawk. I have only seen it spelled in Mohawk
  • I have never seen an English (phonetic) version of the word. Although, if I were to do so, I would spell it, Ganiengehaga.
Now, Kanienkeha, a shorter word, means the place of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte or Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory (same place). If spelled according to English sounds, it would look like this: Ganiengeha. Iroquois is arguably a French word meaning something approximate to snake people, or snake eaters. It is a word chosen by other people long ago to describe us. I have used Mohawk and Confederacy words in this unit, as they are accurate and relevant, and are how we are referred to day. However, the difference must be shown between the English words that have been used to describe us in the past (and present), and our own words for our own people. These were the words used before contact, and have survived since contact with Europeans. Students need to know the difference as any research they may do now or in the future will depend on the various names they know for the Haudenoshaunee.

87. Welcome To Sqwire.com
Query Results 1 through of 6 for word origins Research word origins at QuestiaQuestia online library offers more than 70,000 books and journal articles.
http://www.sqwire.com/query.php?aid=592&kw=word origins

88. Huumor.Com - Occupational Names (word Origins)
this page! Various Jokes Occupational names (word origins) Postedon Thursday, January 30 @ 000000 EET by alar. Various Jokes
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89. Sicilian Culture: Mafia Word Origins
Links, Traditions More! sicilianculture.com. Please support thissite by shopping at . Mafia word origins. The word Mafia became
http://www.sicilianculture.com/mafia/mafiawords.htm
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"The word Mafia became known throughout Italy for the first time in 1863, when a Sicilian writer, Giuseppe Rizzotto [sicaccording to Hess, Rizzotti e Mosca, 2], wrote a play entitled "I Mafiusi di La Vicaria" which went through 2,000 performances, over a period of 23 years, of which 34 in the Italian language, in Rome alone, in 1884. "According to Gaetano Mosca, the word mafia cannot be found in any Sicilian dictionary before 1868, when it was entered as a neologism in Traina's "Sicilian-Italian Dictionary."In another dictionary, Mortillaro's, published in 1878, the word is said to be of Piedmontese origin and to be synonymous with camorra. However, this is not correct. "The adjective mafiusu (mafioso, in Italian) has been common in Sicily for at least two hundred yers. Cesareo, the poet, found the following verses in an eighteenth century manuscript: Quannu vinisti vui, piciotta bedda
tutta la briaria si ribiddau
chi l'anncilu, bedd' ancilu purtau.

90. Word Origins
Vocabulary. word origins. Word Phrase Origins; Etymology;Word Detective; Greek Latin Roots; Latin Lingo; Word Wizard.
http://www.myshortpencil.com/schooltalk/ela4/ela4vocab-6.htm
Vocabulary
Word Origins

91. Word Origins -- Ben's Message Board
Subject word origins. Author Biff, Next Thread Previous Thread Next Message Previous Message Date Posted 121153 12/03
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Next Message Previous Message Date Posted: 12:11:53 12/03/01 Mon
In reply to: Randy 's message, Old English on 12:11:53 12/03/01 Mon
>In old English the vulgar word for intercourse was
>swive. You will find it several places in Canterbury
>tales if you can find an uncensored version. My >understanding is that planting seeds by poking them >into the ground with a stick was called fucking and >this is where our current vulgar phrase for >intercourse came from. My understanding was this: Prior to the Reformation, when someone was caught in the sin of fornication, they were placed in the stocks for a prescribed period of time, and had the acronym for the words: "For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge" (F.U.C.K.) branded on either their forehead or their tongue, I don't remember which. Other interesting term origins: I believe it was during the Black Plague in Europe that they began to run out of cemetery space. So they started digging up old graves and reusing them. When they did this, they discovered that some of those previously buried were found in different positions than they would have been laid in. The realisation was that these people had been buried alive. So, it became a common practice to attach a string to the newly deceased's hand when they were buried, and run this string up through the earth to the surface to a stick with a bell attached. If the person regained consciousness, they would pull the string and ring the bell. They were termed a "dead ringer." It was also common to have a person wait by the grave for the first night after burial to listen for the bell. This person worked the "graveyard shift."

92. Creative Writing For Teens
Etymology word origins Guide picks. Ever wondered where words camefrom? Etymology Net Links to help you study of word origins.
http://teenwriting.about.com/cs/etymology/
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93. HallAudiobooks.com 2107 Curious Word Origins, Sayings And
HallAudiobooks.com 2107 Curious word origins, Sayings and Expressionsfrom White Elephants to Song Dance. HallAudiobooks.com. the
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94. Word Origins
word origins. Word (Latin or Greek origin) example, Abduct (awayfrom + to lead). Abductor - muscle which moves the part away from
http://www.med.sc.edu:89/Gross/PassingGross/WordOrigins.htm
WORD ORIGINS Word (Latin or Greek origin) - example Abduct (away from + to lead) Abductor - muscle which moves the part away from the midline of the body or a part of the body Acetabulum (vinegar + receptacle) - the socket of the hip joint Acinus (grape) - the smallest lobule of a gland or a sac-like dilation of a small passage Acromion (raised point + shoulder) Adduct (toward + lead) - to draw toward Aden (gland) Adenoid (gland + like) - lymphoid tissue in the nasopharynx Adnexa (to + bind) - the ovary and tube are "attached" to the uterus Adventitia (to come in, an addition from without) - outer tissue Afferent (toward + carry) Ala (wing) Alba (white) Alveolus (hollow + small space) - tooth socket or air spaces of the lung Ampulla (flask shaped) - a dilated area + a narrow neck Amygdaloid (almond shaped) Anastomosis (up + mouth) - mouth-like openings coming together Aneurysm (up + widening) - a widening or ballooning out of an artery Angio (vessel) - carries lymph or blood Annular (round) Ansa (handle of a jug) - nervous structure in the form of a loop Arachnoid (spider web + like) - a thin membrane over the brain and spinal cord Arcuate (arched) Arthro- (joint) Astrocyte (star + cell) Atlas - the 1 st cervical vertebra (C1) Autonomic (self + law) - a self regulated (law unto itself) nervous system Axon (axle) - each neuron has a single axon arising from the axon hillock Azygos (unyoked) - not a pair Bolus (throw) - a large quantity of a substance, ingested or injected, and intended for therapeutic or diagnostic usage

95. Word Origins: Kit And Caboodle
Source QPB Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins By Robert Hendrickson.Please send submissions to dave@unm.edu Back to the Word Origin Page.
http://www.unm.edu/~dave/words/Kit_and_Caboodle.html
    The caboodle in this American expression meaning " the whole lot" is the same as the word boodle, for "a pile of money", deriving from the Dutch boedal, " property". The whole kit, of course, means the entire outfit. The phrase doesn't read " the whole kit and boodle" because Americans like alliteration in speech and added a "k" sound before boodle in the phrase. Source: QPB Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins By Robert Hendrickson
Please send submissions to dave@unm.edu Back to the Word Origin Page

96. Internet Public Library: Pathfinders
Directory. Part of the Internet Public Library. Describes books and web sites that might be helpful. Offers a hint on how to use an ordinary search engine when looking for etymology.
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Word and Phrase Origins
This guide is designed for anyone who is looking for the origin of words and/or phrases, also called etymology (these terms will be used interchangeably in this pathfinder). Both print-based and Web-based sources are included.
Internet Sources Searching for Etymology Print Resources
Internet Sources
In general, web sites on word and phrase origins are good, but not comprehensive: most of them are question services of a sort, and the answers are posted on the site. Some of these archives can be quite large, and not necessarily organized by anything more than date of posting; if you're looking for something specific, use the find Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
http://www.bibliomania.com

97. Phrases, Sayings, Quotes And Cliches, With Their Meanings And Origins.
A large archive of phrases, sayings, quotes and cliches, with their meanings and origins. Give it a word and it will return a related list.
http://phrases.shu.ac.uk/
phrases, sayings, quotes and cliches at The Phrase Finder The Phrase Thesaurus Phrase Thesaurus Subscription Meanings and origins of phrases and sayings Discussion Forum ... Contacts Looking for the meaning or origin of a phrase or saying? Here's free access to:
Our sister site, the Phrase Thesaurus is a subscription service for professional writers and other language lovers. This writers' resource generates ideas for headlines, advertising copy, song lyrics, poetry etc. Type in a word and it displays a list of phrases and sayings that are related to your word in some way - often in ways you wouldn't expect. Journalists, advertising copywriters, songwriters, or anyone interested in creative writing in English, can benefit from this unique writer's resource.

98. Polkaorigin
Article on the contenders for the origins of the word polka and the dance it denotes.
http://www.polamjournal.com/Library/APHistory/polkaorigin/body_polkaorigin.html
The Origin of the Word Polka
by Robert Pula
Much confusion has developed over the meaning of the term "polka" and the origin of the dance the term represents. In both instances, the prime contenders for the origin of both the term and the dance are the Poles and the Czechs, counterclaims that are not sufficiently explored even in contemporary works such as Victor Greene's recent A Passion for Polka: Old-Time Ethnic Music in America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992). Supporting the Polish origins in the fifth edition of Grove's (1954, Vol. III, p. 333), the noted musicologist Czeslaw R. Halski states that "The polka [Polish girl] is undoubtedly of Polish origin. This dance is extremely popular throughout the country, though in some regions it goes under different names such as szot przodek , or oryl. In the majority of regions, however, it is so dearly beloved that some odd and descriptive sobriquets are added to its name, such as 'polka-kokietka' [coquette polka]

99. TEACHING
Studies in the word for those interested in the deeper Christian life. Some are based on the Hebrew and Greek origins of the original words, but all are applicable to life today.
http://home.pacifier.com/~teaching/
PURSUING THE ETERNAL WORD
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*Optional - We like to have this in case your e-mail does not work. Statement of Faith Who is John Lifflander? Books by John Lifflander THE PROPHETIC REVELATION OF THE FEASTS OF ISRAEL ... Part One We find spiritual symbolism in the ceremonies of the Feasts of Israel. Christ is exalted and magnified in them, and as we discover Him therein, we also find spiritual understanding and prophetic revelation. For those seeking the deep things of God, this series of teachings should be a wonderful spiritual adventure! THE TRUE BLESSINGS A Study of the Sermon on the Mount (Part Six) "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." Matthew 5:8 (NKJV) Can we as fallen humans be pure in heart? Examining the Fellowship Offering and the Feast of Unleavened Bread under the Old Covenant sheds light on what Christ means in this teaching. LOSING CHRIST IN AMERICA Prophetic Insights - November 2002 Why is America facing her current problems, and what lies on the horizon for her? This message discusses these issues.

100. Biblevotes
Claims that The Bible was not handed to mankind by God, nor was it dictated to human stenographers by God. It has nothing to do with God. In actuality, the Bible was VOTED to be the word of God by a group of men during the 4th century. Deist perspective.
http://www.deism.com/biblevotes.htm
THE BIBLE'S UNHOLY ORIGINS by Robert L. Johnson Many rank and file Christians sincerely believe the Bible is a direct communication from God to man. I know I used to believe it was when I was a Christian. And from recent conversations with many sincere Christians I know this is currently true for many believers. Once it is proven to our God-given reason that the Bible is strictly a man-made collection of mythology the mind loses yet another shackle of "revelation" and is soon on its way to full freedom and progress. The Bible was not handed to mankind by God, nor was it dictated to human stenographers by God. It has nothing to do with God. In actuality, the Bible was VOTED to be the word of God by a group of men during the 4th century. According to Professor John Crossan of Biblical Studies at DePaul University the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great (274-337 CE), (a bust of Constantine is pictured below) who was the first Roman Emperor to convert to Christianity, needed a single canon to be agreed upon by the Christian leaders to help him unify the remains of the Roman Empire. Until this time the various Christian leaders could not decide which books would be considered "holy" and thus "the word of God" and which ones would be excluded and not considered the word of God. Emperor Constantine, who was Roman Emperor from 306 CE until his death in 337 CE, used what motivates many to action -

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