September 05, 2005, 10:32
<wordnerd>Do you suppose?
My thoughts
here brought to mind this question: What is the etymological connection between
suppose/supposition and
suppository?
September 05, 2005, 11:11
zmježdThey're all three of them from the Latin
suppono (
supponere supposui suppositum) 'to place under; bury; substitute (falsely), counterfeit; add, annex; subject'.
September 05, 2005, 11:29
<Asa Lovejoy>Gives a whole new meaning to Beavis and Butthead!
September 05, 2005, 15:32
KallehYep. Here is what the OED says of the etymology of
suppository: "[ad. late L. suppositrium, neut. sing., used subst., of suppositrius placed underneath or up, f. supposit-, suppnre to SUPPONE. Cf. F. suppositoire.]"
September 05, 2005, 17:00
jerry thomasOn the outskirts of Buenos Aires, a city rife with monuments, when I lived there a long time ago, there was an enormous tank for storage of propae gas. It was shaped like a two-ended bullet and probably held 100,000 gallons. It was locally known as "
El Monumento Al Supositorio."September 05, 2005, 20:46
BethDear Wordnerd
Ah 'spose (the correct pronunciation, of course) that if one uses a suppository long enough, one may operate under the supposition that emissions will take place. That would be a connection, rather more direct than etymological.
But it passes all knowledge whether wordnerds deal in such directness, doth it not?

Beth J
September 06, 2005, 06:04
CaterwaullerExcellent, Beth.