I like the word meld,
because it sounds basic and hard-working and makes me think of blacksmiths
forging swords and armor. Another reason
to like it I just discovered: it’s a mystery word; etymologists have not
uncovered its origins. We know it was
around by 1910. It might come from Canasta,
in which a player can “meld” certain combinations of cards for a score. This sense of the word is derived from the
German melden, “to make known,
announce”, going back to the Proto-Germanic attested in the Old English meldian: “to declare, tell, display,
proclaim”. Or meld might be a past participle of the word mell, of which I’ve never heard before today.
What does mell
mean, then? It is a verb we received
from the Old French way back as far as A.D. 1300, meaning “to mix, meddle”. Aha! I
have heard it! But only in the compound:
pell-mell, “confusedly”.
This brings us to meddle,
another word I’m fond of. It is said to
come from the same Old French, who received their word from the Latin, miscere, still meaning “to mix.”
Though they sound much the same when speaking these days, meddle doesn’t have too much to do with metal, and it’s too bad, given my
unfounded association of blacksmiths with the word meld (which may or may not have anything really to do with meddle).
Metal is English’s inheritance
of Latin’s borrowing from the Greek metallon,
used to refer to ore, but originally applied only as a verb “to mine, to
quarry.” Etymonline.com
says that though the origin of that Greek word is unknown, there is evidence to
suggest its relation to metallan, “to
seek after.”
Medley does have
to do with meddle, however. Surprisingly, this word made its debut in
English referring to a “hand-to-hand” combat, waiting 150 years before it took
on the meaning of “mixture, combination” and then another 150 years or so
before being applied to music.
Melody was hanging
out in the French language, thence visiting English at about the same time that
medley meant “combat.” Melody
has always had to do with music, though.
It came from the Greek melos,
which has two roots seen in melisma
(from a Proto-Indo-European root meaning “a limb”??) and ode.
Mellow can refer
to music in the vernacular of the 21st century, but it actually
began by referring to the characteristics of ripe fruit: “soft, sweet, juicy.” It may have come from mele, “ground grain”, the root of meal, and been influenced by the Old English mearu, “soft, tender.”
Beginning in the 1680’s (less at present), mellow has described someone “slightly drunk.”
This brings to mind the words mead and meadow, but they
received their own article in 2007, so I’ll simply refer you there: http://ladyoflongbourn.blogspot.com/2007/04/mead.html
Before I close I would like to visit two other words that
are similar (by reason of sharing all the same consonants) to meld:
Mold may be the
most interesting, because it is the same word now, but its diverse definitions
have had parallel (never-touching) evolutions.
Mold meaning “hollow
shape” from which we get the verb meaning “to knead, shape, mix, blend” has
been part of the English vocabulary since A.D. 1200, originally “fashion, form;
nature, native constitution, character”.
This came via the French from the Latin modulum “measure, model” from the same root as mode.
Mold referring to
the “furry fungus” is sometimes, especially outside of America , spelled mould, from moulen in the Old English related to the Old Norse mygla.
It is possible that these words derived from the Proto-Germanic root *(s)muk- and the Proto-Indo-European *meug- (found in the word mucus).
Or, it may come to us from the third definition of mold:
Mold, archaically,
means “loose earth”. In Old English molde meant “earth, sand, dust, soil,
land, country, world”. It is
Proto-Germanic, attested in Old Frisian, Old Norse, Middle Dutch, Dutch, Old
High German, Gothic. Etymonline.com
suggests that it also comes ultimately from a Proto-Indo-European root *mele- “to rub, grind” (as, once again,
the word meal). It is strange to me, given the similar
sounds, but apparently this word has no common etymology with molt.
Middle is my final
word for today, and I appreciate that it comes into this essay after the Old
English word, molde, “earth”, because
Tolkien paired middle and earth as the name of his fantasy world. (I have absolutely no evidence, but I wonder
if Tolkien thought there was some relation?)
Middel is the Old English
form, from Proto-Germanic root *medjaz
directly bringing us mid, “with, in
conjunction with, in company with, together with, among” probably from the
Proto-Indo-European *medhyo once more
meaning “middle.”
(my source is www.Etymonline.com)
To God be all glory.
To God be all glory.
1 comment:
Incidentally, there is a word "mettle", which for centuries meant the same as "metal" but in the 1700's, diverged to refer to "the stuff one is made of": *test your mettle*.
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=mettle&allowed_in_frame=0
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