Wordsmith.org
Posted By: of troy linsey-woolsy-- - 09/17/07 12:29 PM
a theme after my own heart.

defined as An incongruous mix. its is one that is proscribe in jewish law.Orthodox jew many not sit on cushions or fabric made from a blend of linen and wool. (it's not simple incongruous, it's an abomination.

cloth and textiles are a rich source of words, in english and other languages.

Text (written words) gets is name from the appearance of crowded letters on a page. they looked like interwoven threads.. like a sort of textile.. (and textiles, the process of weaving was the first big technology.. and there is a strong relationship between the process for making things and cloth..
Posted By: Jackie Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/18/07 02:02 AM
Not to mention such things as 'the fabric of society' and 'all life is interwoven'.
Posted By: Zed Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/18/07 11:54 PM
or feeling worn thin or hemmed in.
Posted By: of troy Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/19/07 01:39 AM
speaking of fabric, long ago (may 02) word wind and i had a disjointed conversation on croc's, that moved to sweet stuff, and then to fabric (not textiles) and other stuff

see it here

Posted By: tsuwm Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/22/07 03:06 AM
farandine - a kind of cloth used in the seventeenth century, made partly of silk and partly of wool or hair

farandinical - of the nature of farandine; hence, second-rate, worthless; Cf. the use of bombast, fustian, linsey-woolsey

-joe (a coat of many fabrics) friday
Posted By: Jackie Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/22/07 02:52 PM
partly of silk and partly of wool or hair
Ai-ee! Fairly uncomfortable, I should think.

Helen--nice to see you back; I noticed you were absent a while. Went to that thread and was promptly saddened by some names. I still miss Jazzo; remember that post he made, thanking some of the guys for mentoring him? I wish Wordwind would come back, though I seriously doubt it; and Bill certainly won't be back. Anyway--I was impressed with your post that said:
the word crocodile, curiously, is, at it's root, is related to the root word for sugar!

crocodile comes to english, from ME, and L. The ME cocodrille, is from MF, cocodrillus, an alteration of the latin crocodulus, which came from the Greek, krokodilos, (lizard/crocodile) from the greek roots of kroke (shingle, pebble) + drilos, worm.

the kroke of the greek is related to the sanskrit sarkara which also mean pebble(pebbles)

by an other route, sarkara moved to persian as shakar, and then to arabic as sukkar, and then dispersed throught italian and french (it still is surce in french)and into english as sugar!

the pebble meaning has to do with sugar's gritty quality, (very evident if you have ever spilled some!)and the same root shows up again in seersucker, (one of Anu's words with interesting etymologies) seersucker fabic comes from the persian, meaning milk and sugar.

who would have thought, sugar, seersucker, and crocodile, all related words at the root meaning? and are there other words with as much grit!
Posted By: of troy Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/22/07 03:16 PM
i am around.. just posting less i guess. i still read and learn..
Posted By: Jackie Re: linsey-woolsy-- - 09/22/07 03:49 PM
...and teach. :-)
© Wordsmith.org