Wood On Words
Can’t get enough words about words with Sunday’s newspaper column? Then this blog’s for you, my word-craving friend. I work the late shift, so don’t look for responses until the next day.

Archive for November 5th, 2009

Versatile, but obscure

Add comment November 5th, 2009

The first “gig” to make its way into modern English took a long road. Its most recent ancestor is the Middle English “gigge,” meaning “whirligig,” which is mainly a spinning toy or a merry-go-round.

That one probably descended from Scandinavian words, such as the Danish “gig” — “whirling object” or “top” — and the Norwegian dialectical “giga” — “to shake, totter.”

The same Indo-European base, “ghei-,” meaning “to gape,” is also the ultimate origin of “gape” in English, as well as “giggle.”

This “gig” has three specialized definitions in modern English:

“A light, two-wheeled, open carriage drawn by one horse.”

“A long, light ship’s boat, especially one reserved for the commanding officer.”

“A machine for raising nap on cloth” — from the term “gig mill.”

That “nap” is “the downy or hairy surface of cloth,” which sometimes has to be artificially raised by brushing — as with a gig mill.

The sleeping kind of “nap” — my favorite hobby — has the following lineage: from Middle English “nappen” from Old English “hnappian,” akin to Old High German “hnaffezan” — which sort of looks like an attempt to spell a snoring noise.

Whew, I’m pooped. Time to get back to my hobby.


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