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Which Words Do You Find Peculiar or Funny?

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bravejordy | 10:00 Sat 17th Mar 2012 | Word Origins
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One word that always makes me laugh is "discombobulated".

Another, although the reason will be obvious, is "Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia" - the fear of long words!
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I've always thought the word serendipity sounded strange but happy.
That's pretty much what serendipity means; unexpected but happy coincidences.
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I always thought it was part of that song...

Serendipity-doo-dah, zip-a-dee-ay
My oh my what a wonderful day... :)
^^^ now that's a lovely twist on a song I'd be happy to have stuck in my head today :-)
Another one I find odd - you can be overwhelmed or underwhelmed, so why can't you be whelmed?
BJ, here's the kind of example I was thinking of...
"He did not attend the course or sit the final examination but he was deemed to have passed."
There, it is surely perfectly plain that he did NOT, in any true sense, ''pass' the course. What it means is that he was awarded the qualification or whatever, regardless. Thus, the use of 'deemed' caused something that didn't happen...to happen!
And, in your very own tantamount/watch example, if the person concerned was a friend of yours, would you have actually considered him to BE a thief? I supect not, so tantamount to theft was NOT theft; after all you got it back and would have done so in any case.
Actually, Tamborine, disestablishmentarianism DID rear its head in the media a few years ago, when Prince Charles was about to marry his now wife. As a likely future head of the Established Church in England (C of E), the question of divorce and remarriage was a possible major constitutional stumbling-block.
Had the C of E been DISestablished, the problem would presumably never have arisen and believers in disestablishmentarianism would have been happier.
Mrs O, you can't be 'whelmed' because that's not the etymology of the word!

Originally, if you were 'overwhelmed' with something, then you were in it so deep that it had gone 'over' your 'whelm' or your helmet. By extrapolation, over time it has come to take on a less physical and more emotional connotation.

Underwhelmed is a facetious play on overwhelmed due to misunderstanding about how the word is composed, and dates from the mid-50s.
Thank you for that Mark.
It seems a quirk when you think how many words can have under and over applied to them, i.e. achieved et al
diarrhoea a horrid word, and one i still cannot spell.....
schadenfreude.
Thousands of words can be prefixed with "under" but not "over" e.g. overboard, overtime, overall etc...
Looks correct to me, Em...
I bow to your superior knowledge ;-)
I understand ;o)
Mark, using the spellchecker...
Get back to your readers wives you cheeky builder!
Mark, whelm is a verb meaning to turn upside down especially so as to cover something else, to ruin or destroy, so I would think a person could be whelmed.
Yes, but not in this case! The 'whelm' of 'overwhelm' is derived from an Old English word for 'helmet'. 'Overwhelm', in its original context, had nothing to do with being turned upside down, but simply that you were in it so far that it was over your helmet.
So where did underwhelm come from - putting your bum in the helmet and using it was a portable toilet perhaps.....

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