1 00:00:07,136 --> 00:00:09,033 English, like all languages, 2 00:00:09,033 --> 00:00:10,573 is a messy business. 3 00:00:10,573 --> 00:00:13,283 You can be uncouth but not couth. 4 00:00:13,283 --> 00:00:14,720 You can be ruthless, 5 00:00:14,720 --> 00:00:16,333 but good luck trying to show somebody 6 00:00:16,333 --> 00:00:17,414 that you have ruth 7 00:00:17,414 --> 00:00:18,950 unless you happen to be married 8 00:00:18,950 --> 00:00:20,691 to someone named Ruth. 9 00:00:20,691 --> 00:00:22,154 It's bad to be unkempt 10 00:00:22,154 --> 00:00:23,999 but impossible to be kempt, 11 00:00:23,999 --> 00:00:27,305 or sheveled as opposed to disheveled. 12 00:00:27,305 --> 00:00:27,996 There are other things 13 00:00:27,996 --> 00:00:29,561 that make no more sense than those 14 00:00:29,561 --> 00:00:30,864 but that seem normal now 15 00:00:30,864 --> 00:00:32,446 because the sands of time 16 00:00:32,446 --> 00:00:34,443 have buried where they came from. 17 00:00:34,443 --> 00:00:36,144 For example, did you ever wonder 18 00:00:36,144 --> 00:00:39,275 why a nickname for Edward is Ned? 19 00:00:39,275 --> 00:00:40,645 Where'd the N come from? 20 00:00:40,645 --> 00:00:43,248 It's the same with Nellie for Ellen. 21 00:00:43,248 --> 00:00:45,280 Afterall, if someone's name is Ethan, 22 00:00:45,280 --> 00:00:47,401 we don't nickname him Nethan, 23 00:00:47,401 --> 00:00:50,578 nor do we call our favorite Maria, Nmaria. 24 00:00:50,578 --> 00:00:51,904 In fact, if anyone did, 25 00:00:51,904 --> 00:00:54,275 our primary urge would be to either scold them 26 00:00:54,275 --> 00:00:55,752 or gently hide them away 27 00:00:55,752 --> 00:00:57,773 until the company had departed. 28 00:00:57,773 --> 00:01:01,362 All these nicknames trace back to a mistake, 29 00:01:01,362 --> 00:01:04,116 although, a perfectly understandable one. 30 00:01:04,116 --> 00:01:06,928 In fact, even the word nickname is weird. 31 00:01:06,928 --> 00:01:09,384 What's so "nick" about a nickname? 32 00:01:09,384 --> 00:01:11,801 Is it that it's a name that has a nick in it? 33 00:01:11,801 --> 00:01:13,557 Let's face it, not likely. 34 00:01:13,557 --> 00:01:16,279 Actually, in Old English, the word was ekename, 35 00:01:16,279 --> 00:01:19,163 and eke meant also or other. 36 00:01:19,163 --> 00:01:21,211 You can see eke still used 37 00:01:21,211 --> 00:01:23,837 in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in a sentence like, 38 00:01:23,837 --> 00:01:26,749 "Whan Zephyrus eek with his sweete breeth," 39 00:01:26,749 --> 00:01:27,671 which meant, 40 00:01:27,671 --> 00:01:30,169 "When Zephyr also with his sweet breath." 41 00:01:30,169 --> 00:01:33,569 Ekename meant "also name." 42 00:01:33,569 --> 00:01:37,112 What happened was that when people said, "an ekename," 43 00:01:37,112 --> 00:01:38,668 it could sound like they were saying, 44 00:01:38,668 --> 00:01:40,687 "a nekename," 45 00:01:40,687 --> 00:01:41,742 and after a while, 46 00:01:41,742 --> 00:01:43,618 so many people were hearing it that way 47 00:01:43,618 --> 00:01:44,941 that they started saying, 48 00:01:44,941 --> 00:01:46,288 "That's my nickname," 49 00:01:46,288 --> 00:01:49,744 instead of, "That's my ekename." 50 00:01:49,744 --> 00:01:51,778 Now, the word had a stray n at the front 51 00:01:51,778 --> 00:01:53,183 that started as a mistake, 52 00:01:53,183 --> 00:01:56,360 but from now on was what the word really was. 53 00:01:56,360 --> 00:01:57,987 It was rather as if you had gum 54 00:01:57,987 --> 00:01:59,542 on the bottom of your shoe 55 00:01:59,542 --> 00:02:00,738 and stepped on a leaf, 56 00:02:00,738 --> 00:02:02,743 dragged that leaf along for the rest of your life, 57 00:02:02,743 --> 00:02:04,175 were buried wearing that shoe 58 00:02:04,175 --> 00:02:05,327 and went to heaven in it 59 00:02:05,327 --> 00:02:08,631 to spend eternity wedded to that stray, worn-out leaf. 60 00:02:08,631 --> 00:02:12,060 Ekename picked up an n and never let it go. 61 00:02:12,060 --> 00:02:13,769 The same thing happened with other words. 62 00:02:13,769 --> 00:02:17,406 Old English speakers cut otches into wood. 63 00:02:17,406 --> 00:02:18,933 But after centuries of being asked 64 00:02:18,933 --> 00:02:21,824 to cut an otch into something, 65 00:02:21,824 --> 00:02:25,615 it was easy to think you were cutting a notch instead, 66 00:02:25,615 --> 00:02:27,410 and pretty soon you were. 67 00:02:27,410 --> 00:02:29,284 In a world where almost no one could read, 68 00:02:29,284 --> 00:02:31,194 it was easier for what people heard 69 00:02:31,194 --> 00:02:32,695 to become, after awhile, 70 00:02:32,695 --> 00:02:34,827 what it started to actually be. 71 00:02:34,827 --> 00:02:37,368 Here's where the Ned-style nicknames come in. 72 00:02:37,368 --> 00:02:39,490 Old English was more like German 73 00:02:39,490 --> 00:02:41,206 than our English is now, 74 00:02:41,206 --> 00:02:43,910 and just as in German, my is mein, 75 00:02:43,910 --> 00:02:47,161 in Old English, my was meen. 76 00:02:47,161 --> 00:02:48,596 You would say meen book, 77 00:02:48,596 --> 00:02:50,570 actually boke in Old English, 78 00:02:50,570 --> 00:02:52,100 or meen cat. 79 00:02:52,100 --> 00:02:53,591 And just as today, 80 00:02:53,591 --> 00:02:55,243 we might refer to our child 81 00:02:55,243 --> 00:02:56,424 as my Dahlia 82 00:02:56,424 --> 00:02:57,894 or my Laura, 83 00:02:57,894 --> 00:03:00,577 in Old English, they would say, "Meen Ed". 84 00:03:00,577 --> 00:03:02,474 That is mein Ed, 85 00:03:02,474 --> 00:03:04,339 mein Ellie. 86 00:03:04,339 --> 00:03:06,081 You see where this is going. 87 00:03:06,081 --> 00:03:08,545 As time passed, meen morphed 88 00:03:08,545 --> 00:03:10,924 into the my we know today. 89 00:03:10,924 --> 00:03:14,066 That meant that when people said, "Mein Ed," 90 00:03:14,066 --> 00:03:17,331 it sounded like they were saying my Ned. 91 00:03:17,331 --> 00:03:19,194 That is, it sounded like whenever someone 92 00:03:19,194 --> 00:03:21,009 referred to Edward affectionately, 93 00:03:21,009 --> 00:03:23,778 they said Ned instead of Ed. 94 00:03:23,778 --> 00:03:26,180 Behold, the birth of a nickname! 95 00:03:26,180 --> 00:03:29,580 Or an ekename. 96 00:03:29,580 --> 00:03:31,236 Hence, also Nellie for Ellen 97 00:03:31,236 --> 00:03:32,567 and Nan for Ann, 98 00:03:32,567 --> 00:03:34,817 and even in the old days, Nabby for Abigal. 99 00:03:34,817 --> 00:03:39,033 President John Adam's wife Abigail's nickname was Nabby. 100 00:03:39,786 --> 00:03:41,585 All sorts of words are like this. 101 00:03:41,585 --> 00:03:44,735 Old English speakers wore naprons, 102 00:03:44,735 --> 00:03:48,839 but a napron sounds like an apron, 103 00:03:48,839 --> 00:03:50,758 and that gave birth to a word apron 104 00:03:50,758 --> 00:03:53,333 that no one in Beowulf would have recognized. 105 00:03:53,333 --> 00:03:56,380 Umpire started as numpires, too. 106 00:03:56,933 --> 00:03:58,939 If all of this sounds like something sloppy 107 00:03:58,939 --> 00:04:00,930 that we modern people would never do, 108 00:04:00,930 --> 00:04:02,817 then think about something you hear all the time 109 00:04:02,817 --> 00:04:04,197 and probably say, 110 00:04:04,197 --> 00:04:06,184 "A whole nother." 111 00:04:06,184 --> 00:04:07,737 What's nother? 112 00:04:07,737 --> 00:04:10,317 We have the word another, of course, 113 00:04:10,317 --> 00:04:13,604 but it's composed of an and other, 114 00:04:13,604 --> 00:04:14,612 or so we thought. 115 00:04:14,612 --> 00:04:17,445 Yet, when we slide whole into the middle, 116 00:04:17,445 --> 00:04:19,397 we don't say, "a whole other," 117 00:04:19,397 --> 00:04:22,311 we clip that n off of the an 118 00:04:22,311 --> 00:04:23,455 and stick it to other 119 00:04:23,455 --> 00:04:26,403 and create a new word, nother. 120 00:04:26,403 --> 00:04:28,444 For a long time, nobody was writing 121 00:04:28,444 --> 00:04:29,746 these sort of things down 122 00:04:29,746 --> 00:04:31,374 or putting them in a dictionary, 123 00:04:31,374 --> 00:04:32,708 but that's only because writing 124 00:04:32,708 --> 00:04:35,749 is more codified now than it was 1,000 years ago. 125 00:04:35,749 --> 00:04:37,346 So, when you see a weird word, 126 00:04:37,346 --> 00:04:38,861 remember that there might be 127 00:04:38,861 --> 00:04:41,263 a whole nother side to the story.