[Ads-l] An etymythology semi-endorsed by The New Yorker

Jesse Sheidlower jester at PANIX.COM
Fri Jan 26 14:12:04 UTC 2024


I go one further when I'm talking about this: If anyone tells you that _any_ term originated from an acronym, period, they are always wrong.

Yes, there are acronyms out there. But no one will ever _tell you_ about them. "Hey, did you know that _radar_ comes from 'radio detection and ranging'?" Not gonna happen. If someone brings up a purported acronym in general conversation, it's something like _posh, fuck, golf, tip, news, cop_, or something like that, and it's not an acronym.

Jesse Sheidlower

On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 06:24:12AM +0000, Martin Purdy wrote:
> I've seen it claimed that any assertions that a term originated from an acronym prior to 1900 are almost certainly spurious. I'd love to know if there are any documented examples from the 19th century or earlier. 
> 
> Yahoo Mail: Search, organise, conquer 
>  
>   On Fri, 26 Jan 2024 at 14:01, Laurence Horn<laurence.horn at YALE.EDU> wrote:   [Faux acronym division]
> 
> >From an article on “Gratuity culture” and “the Tipping Point” (cute, that):
> 
> By the seventeenth century, visitors to aristocratic estates were expected to pay “vails” to the staff. This might have lowered payroll for the estate itself. At least one aristocrat helped himself to some of this new income stream; he threw frequent parties to increase revenues. The system spread. English coffeehouses were said to set out urns inscribed with “To Insure Promptitude.” Customers tossed in coins. Eventually, the inscription was shortened to “tip.” 
> 
> https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/01/01/has-gratuity-culture-reached-a-tipping-point
> 
> Well, maybe, except that as far as I know there’s no evidence that any such urns were so inscribed. The plausible conclusion is that this is just one of many faux acronym tall tales, spread disingenously or not.  Will subsequent New Yorker pieces on golf and sex promote derivations from “Gentlemen Only, Ladies Forbidden” and “Fornication Under Consent of the King” respectively?  Of course the piece does distance itself a little way from the claim:  “...were said to…”. But Mr. Helfand’s piece still urns…er, earns our skepticism.  
> 
> LH
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