• Flying Squid
    link
    English
    3411 months ago

    The weird thing about the origin of the word sandwich is that everyone had been eating them for centuries, but one day the Earl of Sandwich orders one and they say, “it takes too long to say bread-and-meat, let’s just call it a sandwich.”

    By the way, no one knows for sure the etymology of ‘squid.’

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
      link
      English
      1211 months ago

      Squid is a perfect description of a squid though. So whoever came up with that one, nailed it!

    • Dr. Bob
      link
      fedilink
      English
      611 months ago

      There are a bunch of animal names like that. Notably “dog” and “chicken” just showed up without any real source. In middle English we have hounds, and fowls/cocks/hens. It’s strange for domestic animals that have been around forever to get renamed afor no apparent reason.

      • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
        link
        English
        211 months ago

        I could’ve swore dog came from the old Scottish word dug. Which was another word for dog

      • @Cort
        link
        English
        211 months ago

        Huh, I just assumed chicken was chick+hen

    • @Sorgan71
      link
      English
      -111 months ago

      not true, squid come from squyrde

      • Flying Squid
        link
        English
        811 months ago

        I don’t know what “squyrde” is, but it doesn’t show up in any etymological source I’ve ever seen.

        For example:

        squid (n.)

        “ten-armed marine mollusk, cuttlefish,” 1610s, a word of unknown origin. Klein’s sources suggest it is a sailors’ variant of squirt and so called for the “ink” it jets.

        https://www.etymonline.com/word/squid