Wordcraft Community Home Page
(af)flatus
December 08, 2006, 08:01
Hic et ubique(af)flatus
Kalleh notes elsewhere that "women are
much more worried about passing flatus than men are."
flatus: gas in or from the stomach or intestines
afflatus: a strong creative impulse, especially as a result of divine inspiration
Coincidence? I think
not!!
December 08, 2006, 10:57
arnie"Inspiration" means "breathing in". The ancients believed ideas came from the gods breathing into a person's lungs. Perhaps the breath didn't come from the god's
lungs?
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 08, 2006, 11:44
zmježdAlthough
flatus had a secondary meaning of
farting, its primary meaning was
blowing,
breathing,
snorting.
Afflatus comes from the verb
afflo 'to breathe on, blow on; be favorable to'. Latin
flo is cogante with English
blow. Proto-Indo-European had two related roots for the verb
fart: one for the silent kind, the other for the noisy.
—Ceci n'est pas un seing.
December 08, 2006, 12:50
shufitzquote:
Proto-Indo-European had two related roots for the verb fart: one for the silent kind, the other for the noisy.
I wonder how one could know this?
December 08, 2006, 13:07
goofyquote:
Originally posted by shufitz:
quote:
Proto-Indo-European had two related roots for the verb fart: one for the silent kind, the other for the noisy.
I wonder how one could know this?
That's the
magic of
etymology.
December 08, 2006, 14:13
wordmaticOK, let me get this straight: while we women (wimmyn) have been hard at work at our jobs all day, you men have been sitting around the campfire discussing your own particular brand of hot air?
Yeah, I guess that's about right--only I thought we were so much higher class here on the Wordcraft forum!
Sigh!
Wordmatic
P.S. Did proto-Indo-Europeans eat everything raw?
December 08, 2006, 14:41
missannAnd then there is the word
bloviate, meaning to speak pompously. I looked it up recently but can't find the reference.
December 08, 2006, 15:31
zmježdWM, I didn't really suggest anything based on gender. I just provided the base meanings in Latin. I thought the PIE stuff was just extra linguistic fun.
—Ceci n'est pas un seing.
December 08, 2006, 18:08
<Asa Lovejoy>quote:
Originally posted by arnie:
"Inspiration" means "breathing in". The ancients believed ideas came from the gods breathing into a person's lungs. Perhaps the breath didn't come from the god's lungs?
This is almost verbatim how it's put in Genesis 2:7! It's a good argument against the notion that a blastocyst has "soul" if their god breathed into Adam's lungs the breath of life, and THEN he became a living soul.
December 08, 2006, 22:32
wordmaticquote:
Originally posted by zmjezhd:
WM, I didn't really suggest anything based on gender. I just provided the base meanings in Latin. I thought the PIE stuff was just extra linguistic fun.
But you knew I was just pulling your chain, right?
:-)
December 09, 2006, 05:43
zmježd I was just pulling your chainI guess I'm kind of humor impaired.
—Ceci n'est pas un seing.
December 09, 2006, 07:57
wordmatic'sall right. I just scanned the discussion and saw that--surprise!--only men, up to that point, were discussing flatus, and just couldn't resist. I apologize for my insufferable sexism, heh heh heh.

December 09, 2006, 07:57
<Asa Lovejoy>Of which humor are you impaired? I have an excess of black bile I'll share if you like. It causes flatulence, you know.

December 09, 2006, 08:18
zmježd Of which humor are you impaired?Yes, just another word that has been
smeared. Went all the way from
fluid to
wit. But, to answer your question, the jocular kind, Asa.
—Ceci n'est pas un seing.
December 09, 2006, 12:59
<Asa Lovejoy>Then you'll need a blood transfusion, zmj, since it's the sanguine humor you seem bereft of right now. I probably can't help, since my blood type is only common among grumpy residents of Formosa: Taipei negavive.