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Posted By: Max Quordlepleen - 08/19/00 10:44 AM
Posted By: Jackie Re: Is this the ultimate paradox? - 08/19/00 12:00 PM
Interesting, Max!
Did Anu list this one under the theme, words that are their
own antonym?

Posted By: Jazzoctopus Re: Is this the ultimate paradox? - 08/20/00 05:41 PM
I'd like to know what a hippopotamus has to do with long words.

Posted By: tsuwm Re: Is this the ultimate paradox? - 08/21/00 02:54 AM
what does hippopotamus have to do with long words? why, nothing. the affix does conjure up the image of whopping big though, as does the other affix monstro-, when attached to a word that already refers to big words.
-ron obvious

Posted By: Jazzoctopus Re: Is this the ultimate paradox? - 08/21/00 09:25 PM
If "hippo" means big, and "pot", related to potable, means water, then that would make sense to me that hippopotamus, roughly translated, means "big water animal".

In German, though, hippopotamus is Nilpferd, which basically just means "horse of the Nile". . .

Posted By: Bingley Re: Is this the ultimate paradox? - 08/22/00 04:20 AM
Unfortunately for your theory, Jazzoctopus, hippopotamus comes from the Greek hippos = horse and potamos = river. Hippopotamus therefore equals river horse. Quite close to the German in fact.

Presumably the Ancient Egyptians knew about hippopotami before they knew about horses. Did they call horses land hippopotami?

Bingley
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