Haggard Hawks and Paltry Poltroons Haggard Hawks and Paltry Poltroons

Haggard Hawks and Paltry Poltroons

The Origins of English in Ten Words

    • 3,99 €
    • 3,99 €

Publisher Description

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 Ten Words is all about - the book collects together hundreds of the most intriguing, surprising and little known histories and etymologies of a whole host of English words. From ancient place names to unusual languages, and obscure professions to military slang, this is a fascinating treasure trove of linguistic facts.

GENRE
Reference
RELEASED
2013
17 October
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
288
Pages
PUBLISHER
Little, Brown Book Group
SIZE
1
MB

More Books by Paul Anthony Jones

A Winter Dictionary A Winter Dictionary
2024
The Accidental Dictionary The Accidental Dictionary
2016
The Cabinet of Linguistic Curiosities The Cabinet of Linguistic Curiosities
2017
The Cabinet of Calm The Cabinet of Calm
2020
Why Is This a Question? Why Is This a Question?
2022
Word Drops Word Drops
2015