0:00:06.524,0:00:08.860 Mysteries of vernacular: 0:00:08.860,0:00:10.283 Odd, 0:00:10.283,0:00:13.498 different from what is usual or expected. 0:00:13.498,0:00:16.538 Though the modern word odd has many meanings, 0:00:16.538,0:00:18.450 mathematical or not, 0:00:18.450,0:00:19.780 they can all be traced back 0:00:19.780,0:00:23.263 to the Indo-European root uzdho, 0:00:23.263,0:00:26.218 meaning pointing upwards. 0:00:26.218,0:00:27.880 Inspired by the idea 0:00:27.880,0:00:30.192 of a vertical-pointed object, 0:00:30.192,0:00:33.198 speakers of Old Norse modified this root 0:00:33.198,0:00:35.972 into a new word, oddi, 0:00:35.972,0:00:38.639 which was used to refer to a triangle, 0:00:38.639,0:00:40.815 the simplest pointed object 0:00:40.815,0:00:43.195 geometrically speaking. 0:00:43.195,0:00:45.531 A triangle with a long point, 0:00:45.531,0:00:46.944 like an arrow head 0:00:46.944,0:00:49.868 or a piece of land jutting out into the sea, 0:00:49.868,0:00:53.046 was recognized to have two paired angles 0:00:53.046,0:00:55.943 and a third that stood alone. 0:00:55.943,0:00:59.333 And over time, oddi began to refer 0:00:59.333,0:01:02.527 to something that wasn't matched or paired. 0:01:02.527,0:01:05.596 In Old Norse, oddi also came to mean 0:01:05.596,0:01:08.683 any number indivisible by two. 0:01:08.683,0:01:11.697 And odda mathr, the odd man, 0:01:11.697,0:01:14.143 was used to describe the unpaired man 0:01:14.143,0:01:17.241 whose vote could break a tie. 0:01:17.241,0:01:20.444 Though the English never called a triangle odd, 0:01:20.444,0:01:23.314 they did borrow the odd number 0:01:23.314,0:01:25.135 and the odd man. 0:01:25.135,0:01:27.864 And finally, in the 16th century, 0:01:27.864,0:01:30.448 the notion of the odd man out 0:01:30.448,0:01:33.781 gave rise to our modern meaning peculiar.