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#84959 10/27/02 09:18 PM
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I ran across this word looking up volvelle, and was surprised at the etymology.

from m-w:

Main Entry: in.cu.nab.u.lum
Pronunciation: "in-ky&-'na-by&-l&m, "i[ng]-
Function: noun
Etymology: New Latin, from Latin incunabula, plural, bands holding the baby in a cradle, from in- + cunae cradle
Date: circa 1859
Inflected Form(s): plural in.cu.nab.u.la /-l&/
1 : a book printed before 1501
2 : a work of art or of industry of an early period


in searching the board(didn't want to yart), the only references were to a member named incunabula back in early 2001...



formerly known as etaoin...
#84960 10/27/02 10:38 PM
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wwh Offline
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Dear etaoin: I never heard the etymology rererring to bands that hold child in a cradle.
I always thought the ending was just a diminutive.
I found one site that mentioned Thomas DeQuincy, but I couldn't find anything that
suggested he invented the term.


#84961 10/27/02 11:05 PM
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yeah, the etymology to the meaning just seems to be a bit of a stretch! I guess cradle, early learning, etc, but it's weak...



formerly known as etaoin...
#84962 10/27/02 11:41 PM
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wwh Offline
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Dear etaoin: I had a bit of luck. A search turned up words "swaddling clothes" and search for Incunabula swaddling clothes thurned up this:
ncunabula (Latin: swaddling clothes)


Books printed before the end of the year 1500. The term was first used in reference to printing by
Bernard von Mallinckrodt, dean of Münster cathedral, in De ortu et progressu typographicae (Cologne,
1639), a bicentenary celebration of Gutenberg's invention. The author describes the period up to 1500 as
prima typographicae incunabula (the time when printing was in swaddling clothes), a phrase that other
writers soon copied. In the eighteenth century the word incunabula alone began to be applied to the
products of early printing. The singular form incunabulum, now often anglicized or gallicized to
incunable, is used to refer to a single book from this period. The German equivalent is Wiegendruck
(cradle-book). The choice of the year 1500 as the end of the first period suggests a clear break in the
development of printing, an implication that is not confirmed by the work produced early in the sixteenth
century.



#84963 10/28/02 12:00 AM
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that's great, Bill! thanks for that information. it does make sense then...



formerly known as etaoin...

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