• sooth •
Pronunciation: suth • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Noun
Meaning: The meaning of today's Good Word is, forsooth, none but "truth" and "reality".
Notes: When I was in high school, the North Carolina legislature quite wisely mandated the teaching of one Shakespearean play each year for all four years of high school. I ran with a crowd that not only refused to bemoan this requirement, but read several additional Shakespearean plays each spring. The result was that we became so proficient in the poetical English of the Bard, that we actually conversed in it up and down the halls, much to the bemusement of our schoolmates.
In Play: The upshot was that I collected a catalog of words that should not have been allowed to escape our palates; today's Good Word is one such. It actually still lurks inside other words, like forsooth "truly" and soothsayer "prognosticator, fortune-teller". But why do we no longer hear, "Forsooth, the weather soothsayer predicts mild weather for the weekend. Prithee, should we venture forth to the countryside then?" I think my high school mates and I might have liked these words because they are all purely English and not borrowed from a Romance language.
Word History: The [s] in today's word is actually the same as the [s] in is, for sooth is based on PIE *es- "to be". The present participle of this word was *sont- "being, existing, real, true". That final [t] would have become [th] in Germanic languages. English retained the [th] but lost the [n]; Danish sand "true" and Swedish sann "true" retain the [n] but not the [th]. Other words from *es- include Sanskrit swastika "good luck charm", from su "good" + es-ti "is", forming svasti "well-being", the root of swastika. In the West it has brought no one good luck.
SOOTH
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SOOTH
Last edited by Dr. Goodword on Sat Jun 25, 2005 11:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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What do you guys have against Romance languages? The inkhorn movement is back? Oops, I can't say languages or movement, both are from Latin, and you doctor can't say purely.I think my high school mates and I might have liked these words because they are all purely English and not borrowed from a Romance language.
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But don't forget George Bernard Shaw's take on the subject (cited from memory - I have failed to find the it on the web) :
HenriI lay my eternal curse upon whomsoever shall now, or in the future, make textbooks of my works, and make me hated as Shakespeare is hated. My plays were not designed as instruments of torture.
曾记否,到中流击水,浪遏飞舟?
The obvious word to compare is soothe. Yes, it seems to be the same *es- root.
I'm generally very sceptical when it comes to analyzing one-letter proposed roots and their developments, or efforts to relate words in other languages to Chinese, but I do believe this one. For example, for sōth in OE 'true', Gmc *santhaz, I believe, despite having no children of my own, that it is true parental happiness when you have soothed them enough to make them sleep.
I'm generally very sceptical when it comes to analyzing one-letter proposed roots and their developments, or efforts to relate words in other languages to Chinese, but I do believe this one. For example, for sōth in OE 'true', Gmc *santhaz, I believe, despite having no children of my own, that it is true parental happiness when you have soothed them enough to make them sleep.
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Re: SOOTH
My younger brother and some of his friends did this in high school as well, for instance telling someone to "still thy wagging tongue" instead of "shut up."...we actually conversed in it up and down the halls, much to the bemusement of our schoolmates.
...But why do we no longer hear, "Forsooth, the weather soothsayer predicts mild weather for the weekend. Prithee, should we venture forth to the countryside then?"
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