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Words from Astrology

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April 07, 2003, 22:07
wordcrafter
Words from Astrology
The ancients believed, as do many today, that we live our lives under the influence of astrological events. This week we'll explore some words tracing back to that sort of belief.

saturnine -
1. bitter or scornful;
2. melancholy; sullen; showing a brooding ill humor

(these characteristics believed to be determined by influence of the planet Saturn)
April 08, 2003, 04:45
Graham Nice
spurious
cretinous
drivel
idiotic
mindless
deluded
nonsensical
April 08, 2003, 07:43
Duncan Howell
quote:
Originally posted by Graham Nice:
ASTROLOGY WORDS

spurious
cretinous
drivel
idiotic
mindless
deluded
nonsensical


True, Graham, true. However, you're whipping a dead horse here. As the late Carl Sagan commented in his T.V.series Cosmos , any newspaper you pick up will have far more space devoted to ASTROLOGY than to ASTRONOMY. Why? Heaven knows!!! Roll Eyes
April 09, 2003, 14:28
Morgan
I was looking for something else about astrology and came upon a joke. I didn't want to negate the seriousness of Wordcrafters weekly theme here, so I posted it in the joke thread. Big Grin
April 09, 2003, 14:58
wordcrafter
"Serious"? No, we are subject to today's word.

lunacy - insanity, especially when intermittently relieved by periods of clear-mindedness. by extension: great or wild foolishness; a wildly foolish act.

from L. lunaticus "moon-struck," from luna "moon." Recurrent attacks of insanity believed brought on by lunar phases. Lunatic fringe (1913) was apparently coined by Theodore Roosevelt.
April 09, 2003, 17:43
Duncan Howell
O.K. The moon used to be blamed for recurrent attacks of various psychoses. And the moon has been blamed for causing other illnesses,too....I recall that influenza was once considered to be a manifestation of the moon's influence. Of course, such quaint beliefs can't survive in our modern society. But...if you ask any nurse who works night shifts about how well his/her patients rest during the night of a full moon, he/she will tell you that they don't rest at all. Lots of studies have shown that the nurses' observations are wrong, but you can't convince nurses. (I've tried.) Cops also reputedly think that the full moon influences peoples' behaviour but I can't comment 'cause I'm not married to a cop!

[This message was edited by Duncan Howell on Wed Apr 9th, 2003 at 18:10.]
April 10, 2003, 04:51
Graham Nice
Was I wrong to imagine that lunacy and lunarity were, like hysteria, words associated with ladies' cycles and things?
April 10, 2003, 06:17
wordcrafter
mercurial - with the shrewdness, eloquence, or thievishness attributed to the god Mercury;
also, changeable in temperament or mood; temperamental; volatile

Partly from association with the element mercury, or quicksilver. The planet Mercury moves in the sky more quicksly than any other planet.

And who could forget Mercutio in Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet?
quote:
A month before the first Model T [car] was produced, another great name of the industry was born: General Motors. The company was founded by William Crapo "Billy" Durant, a mercurial figure described by one friend as "a child in emotions, in temperment, and in mental balance."

April 11, 2003, 09:40
wordcrafter
siriasis - sunstroke; sudden prostration from exposure to the sun or excessive heat. also, a sunbath

The brightest star in the sky is Sirius (named from Gk. Seirios "scorching"), associated with heat because it rises in the heat of summer. Ancient Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans said it brought fever in men and madness in dogs. For example, Homer's Iliad describes Achilles' armor:
quote:
all radiant as the star which men call Orion's Hound, and whose beams blaze forth in time of harvest more brilliantly than those of any other that shines by night; brightest of them all though he be, he yet bodes ill for mortals, for he brings fire and fever in his train.
Notice "Orion's hound". This star is in the constellation Canus Major ("the Big Dog"), which is why we call it the Dog Star and call that time of year the "dog days" of summer. The "dog" association apparently began with the ancient Egyptians (whose heiroglyph for the star was a dog), but the reasons for it are obscure.
April 12, 2003, 11:29
wordcrafter
Here are two familiar words with unexpected astrological origins:

dismal - c.1400, eventually tracing back to the concept of "unlucky days" : Latin dies "days" + mali "bad." Through the Middle Ages, calendars marked two days of each month as unlucky, supposedly based on the ancient calculations of Egyptian astrologers.

Query: was the Ides of March marked as an "unlucky day"?

opposition - c.1395, as an astrological term for two heavenly bodies exactly across from one another in the sky.
The meaning "contrast, antagonism" first attested 1581; sense of "political party opposed to the one in power" is from 1704.
April 13, 2003, 11:14
wordcrafter
influence; influenza
The Latin word influere "to flow into" (from in- "in" + fluere "to flow") flowed into English by two separate courses: one through French, and the other through Italian.

In Old French, influence meant an emanation from the stars that acts upon one's character and destiny. Influence in this astrological sense entered English ~1385; by two centuries later the English word had acquired its non-astrological sense.

In Italian, this influenza or star-emanation came to refer metaphorically to the outbreak of a disease caused (it was thought) by the influence of the stars. In 1743 an Italian outbreak of catarrhal fever (an influenza di catarro) spread as an epidemic spread across Europe, and the disease immediately came to be known in English as the influenza.