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jesszafarris.bsky.social
Etymology! Author of WORDS FROM HELL and ONCE UPON A WORD. Podcaster/cohost of Words Unravelled. Content director, engagement director, professor, media and ad world wordsmith. https://linktr.ee/JessZafarris
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Ah yes, legit-book-reviews dot com, the totally legit source for the legittest book reviews and no ulterior motives whatsoever!

The Proto-Indo-European root of the word rumor, *reu-, means “to bellow.” Its Latin (rumorem) and Old French (rumor) predecessors primarily meant “noise” or “clamor,” but were also used disapprovingly for common talk and popular opinion, which ultimately led to today’s gossipy English sense.

Half of the 10 types of seeds I haphazardly planted this season may have died, but I grew these three sugar snap peas, so I’m basically good on groceries for the season, right?

A time-sensitive edition of Words Unravelled will be landing in podcast feeds/on YouTube next week. Subscribe here: podfollow.com/words-unrave... or here: youtube.com/@wordsunravelled

Also fun: The Old English word for a timekeeping device was dægmæl, dæg "day" + mæl "measure, mark," with the second element realated to the word "meal," literally an appointed/measured time (at which one would eat).

Ranger at age 6 and age (almost) 13.

Some would call it "a lack of structure". We would call it "the element of surprise".

A few people have asked me how @robwords.bsky.social and I prep for each episode of Words Unravelled: We almost never tell each other what words we'll research; we determine our topic (like cinema terms or animals), do independent digging to supplement what we already know, and then run with it!

A perfect early summer evening with a pup and a fire on the patio.