Skip to main content

All Questions

-1 votes
1 answer
64 views

What's the meaning of "QTY"? [closed]

I found the abbreviation "QTY" in an assay (not essay!😊). Can you tell me the meaning of this abbreviation? How can I paraphrase/explain it into ordinary words?
POP POP's user avatar
  • 131
3 votes
1 answer
69 views

How come that "bimonthly" means "twice a month" and "every two months" simultaneously? [duplicate]

What's the story behind this word, and how did it end so ambiguous, while other languages differ? There's already "Bimestral"why does every dictionary still uses "once every two months&...
Yosyp's user avatar
  • 33
-1 votes
1 answer
103 views

Is there a word for when the name of something describes or defines how it is made?

I am wondering if there is a word for this as described in the title. My example: I am writing about a SWANA ingredient/food product by the name of "Freekeh", which is based on the Arabic ...
freekehfreak's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
93 views

Does "transparent" have contradictory meanings?

Varous definitions of the word "transparent" seem almost contradictory: nearly invisible easy to perceive functioning without the user's perception The first two definitions seem to be in ...
benjimin's user avatar
  • 139
1 vote
0 answers
43 views

Meaning of "she has hern" in Faulkner's 'As I Lay Dying' [duplicate]

I am reading "As I Lay Dying" and have usually been able to look up the meaning behind the choice of words that Faulkner uses. However, I am unable to find a satisfactory definition of the ...
Nate's user avatar
  • 111
0 votes
2 answers
155 views

What does "Sandbagging" (or sometimes sandboxing) mean as an expression in startup or sales and where is it coming from?

I have heard one meaning of it in the context of a personal goal is to set a too-easy goal (i.e., that you know you can easily achieve). I also heard it is coming from golf. Can someone shed more ...
Behnam Kamrani's user avatar
-1 votes
3 answers
696 views

Word to describe someone with all knowledge in some field [closed]

Word that describes someone that has all possible knowledge in some specific field, like an expert.
Timm's user avatar
  • 1
2 votes
1 answer
253 views

Is "samuraily" correct?

Pahlavāni, knighthood, and samuraily may be different in forms of cultural output, but all three are inherently from the same historical essence. Pahlavāni (پهلوانی) is a Persian word. In its ...
user64617's user avatar
  • 289
6 votes
5 answers
4k views

Transformation Of The Meaning Of the Word "Idiot" [closed]

The historical core meaning of the word "idiot" was a person with a low IQ to a developmentally disabled degree. This sense of the word is now used infrequently as it is considered rude. ...
ohwilleke's user avatar
  • 2,424
1 vote
0 answers
52 views

Is there a word in a dead or lost language that we lost the definition to? [closed]

Is there a word we lost the definition to? A word whose definition we lost to history? Something that is a part of our history but we forgot the meaning with time
Ro Belle's user avatar
  • 111
2 votes
2 answers
76 views

How to describe Bipolar-like behaviour in a positive sense? [closed]

Little bit of background that might seem technical - I'm looking for a name for this common pattern in web design - if you are not logged-in, the homepage shows a marketing landing page. But once you ...
arocks's user avatar
  • 121
0 votes
1 answer
352 views

Doctrine as a verb or adjective [closed]

Doctrine should definitely be a verb in the English language, but apparently, it is not. What would then be the word that best suits such a purpose? Ex: He was doctrined to uphold such beliefs.
Liber's user avatar
  • 159
2 votes
3 answers
1k views

What word was used with the meaning of "suicide" pre-1650s?

Online Etymology Dictionary puts the origin as such: "deliberate killing of oneself," 1650s, from Modern Latin suicidium Wiktiobary here puts: Suicide, 1651, New Latin coinage (probably ...
Tom O' Bedlam's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
72 views

What is a word which means "un-deliberately uncooperative"? (originating back to at least the 17th-century)

I am looking for a word for the quality of being un-deliberately uncooperative? So not the likes of "stubborn" which has a connotation of deliberate uncooperativeness to reason or what-have-...
Tom O' Bedlam's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
249 views

What is it called when two senses of the same word are etymologically independent?

Sometimes different senses of the same word have different etymons. For example, mole as a small burrowing animal and mole as a chemical quantity are etymologically unrelated. Is there a name for ...
kdog's user avatar
  • 103
2 votes
1 answer
263 views

What is a word that describes a monolithic national identity?

Something similar in French would be la jacobinisme (Jacobinism); however, I’m not looking for a political party but a phrase or word in the English lexicon. The definition would be: [Blank] is a noun ...
cp3o's user avatar
  • 21
3 votes
2 answers
423 views

Are there any pairs of English words that are cognate to each other yet have opposite meanings?

Alright, here's the best way I can explain this: if, hypothetically, the word pairs (love, loathe) and (friend, fiend) were cognates (i.e. they shared an etymological ancestor), they would be ...
Kyle O'Brien's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
68 views

What is the idea called when something has happened to you but you just don't know? [duplicate]

There is a word/idea that something has happened to you, but you just don't know that it already has occured. Question Have you ever been phished before? Answer 1. Yes. 2. No, I have never been ...
user153882's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
452 views

Words Similar to the -Smith Suffix [closed]

I am aware of -wright, which is often used as a compound, e.g. playwright. But are there any other suffixes that are synonymous or similar in meaning to -wright and -smith?
oldboy's user avatar
  • 147
2 votes
0 answers
361 views

Inverse of "Decimate" (not really a duplicate)

Historically, the word "decimate" means to "reduce/ destroy by one tenth"... i.e., a decimated army of 100 soldiers would have lost 10 soldiers. Is there a word that means the ...
Jeremy Holovacs's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
60 views

Word for "of or to do with groups"

I appreciate this is somewhat arbitrary, but humour me! I am trying to come up with a term that describes the following... I am working with "groups" of people. This is the informal definition, ...
Xophmeister's user avatar
30 votes
2 answers
4k views

What is the P in 'nope' called?

Nope is another form of No. When we say this other form, we say p in it. What is this p called? Where did it come from?
Sudais's user avatar
  • 345
3 votes
1 answer
72 views

What word would have been used in-place of 'even' during 17th century London

Good evening, I am in the midst of completing a time-placed stageplay and I am being exceedingly pronounced on its authenticity, in accordance with the language and word-choice, to the 1660s in London....
Tom O' Bedlam's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
337 views

Is there a word for when suffixes are overly co-opted into new words?

For example: Alcoholic -- Alcohol means... well, alcohol. The suffix "-ic" means "of or pertaining to" Chocoholic -- Choco: a shortened form of "chocolate". The suffix "-holic" seemingly means "...
Zaya's user avatar
  • 1,051
1 vote
1 answer
856 views

General way to describe words like "understand", based on archaic senses of their component parts

The word "understand" is fascinating. A surface parse of the word gives little insight into how the components are related to the concept associated with the word. In contrast, with words like "...
Scott Deerwester's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
320 views

What's the -nym for describing a time of day or a period of time?

We have these... Morning, afternoon, evening, night, day, and it's like night and day Midnight and noon, and high noon Yesterday, today, and tomorrow Earlier, later, and now Four O'Clock 2300 hours ...
Kit's user avatar
  • 135
1 vote
0 answers
62 views

Word request (historical) - net worn by ancient soldiers

I am looking for a word for a net worn by soldiers in ancient times hanging down from their helmets, sometimes too long as resting on shoulders. (Please, refer to the picture annotated by red arrow ...
threeA's's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
72 views

Daily in terms of annual [closed]

A frequency of events can be expressed using annual (once per year). Also prefixes can be applied to increase the frequency during the year: biannual (twice per year), triannual (thrice per year), etc....
Felix Bytow's user avatar
36 votes
2 answers
10k views

Why is there paternal, for fatherly, fraternal, for brotherly, but no similar word for sons?

If paternal is "relating to someone's parents", and fraternal "relating to someone's brothers", is there, or why isn't there, a word for "relating to someone's sons", i.e: sunternal Sentence example: ...
Andrea Rowlatt's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
299 views

Is there a word for "invented words that are a natural extrapolation of etymology"

In "(India)" english, there is a word "prepone", which is the opposite of "postpone". It's interesting that this word appears in a non-native dialect of English (although that's debatable given the ...
OregonTrail's user avatar

15 30 50 per page