Wordcraft Community Home Page
Looming deadlines

This topic can be found at:
https://wordcraft.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/932607094/m/1801034182

December 20, 2005, 13:10
Caterwauller
Looming deadlines
Why are they looming? Are they, somehow woven? Why loom? Am I using this incorrectly? I'm avoiding my own looming deadlines at work to ask this . . .but sometimes I just HAVE to know what you all think!


*******
"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.
~Dalai Lama
December 20, 2005, 19:45
Kalleh
Good question, CW. The definition of a loom being an apparatus seems to come from an Old English word meaning tool. I have no idea how the definition of "a distorted, threatening appearance of something" evolved, though.
December 21, 2005, 06:06
aput
The words are unrelated. The noun is an old word originally for any tool (as in 'heirloom'), while the verb is later and of unknown origin.

I vaguely recall, but cannot now justify it, that the verb first appeared in 'loom large' and referred to the appearance of ships appearing from in the offing. Can anyone confirm or disconfirm this?
December 21, 2005, 10:59
arnie
The Online Etymology Dictionary says, of the verb,
quote:
1542, perhaps from a Scand. source (cf. dial. Swed. loma, E.Fris. lomen "move slowly"), perhaps a variant from the root of lame (adj.); first used of ships.

Interestingly, the "tool" meaning apparently gave rise to it meaning "penis" in 1400-1600! Red Face


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
December 21, 2005, 12:53
aput
Yes, I'd read that. That's what I meant by 'unknown'. :-)
December 21, 2005, 14:42
neveu
In vision research, looming refers to the increase in size of the retinal image of an object as it gets closer to the observer.
December 21, 2005, 15:52
<Asa Lovejoy>
quote:
Originally posted by arnie:
lomen "move slowly"), perhaps a variant from the root of lame (adj.); first used of ships.


Any relation to "lumber in its plodding movement meaning?

Interestingly, the "tool" meaning apparently gave rise to it meaning "penis" in 1400-1600! Red Face[/QUOTE]

A slow moving penis? A lumbering lingam? Chasing a vagrant vagina, no doubt.
December 21, 2005, 16:34
Caterwauller
Well! I've been so good about not being naughty on the board, and here I've started another sexual member thread. Wink

*bats eyelashes innocently*


*******
"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.
~Dalai Lama
December 21, 2005, 16:50
Hic et ubique
quote:
so good about not being naughty, and here I've started another sexual member thread
It's unavoidable. As the poem notes,
December 21, 2005, 19:50
<Asa Lovejoy>
But asymptotic, which is highly frustrating!