
Words of a Feather
Murray Suid(Author)
McGraw-Hill Professional (Publisher)
Published on 16. November 2006
Book
Hardback
208 pages
978-0-07-147721-5 (ISBN)
Description
Dazzle your friends and family with your knowledge of word origins!
What's the connection between maneuver and manure? Between glamour and grammar? Anger and angina? At first glance, these words seem to have nothing in common, but in fact they are Words of a Feather, connected by their origins. This cleverly entertaining book explores the shared histories of 150 word pairs (called "dual etymologies") to give language lovers of all ages a fun and powerful vocabulary-building education that's sure to impress.
Adversary & Advertisement:
Both share the same root for "turn." An adversary is someone you don't want to turn away from, lest he shoot you in the back. An advertisement makes you turn toward it, so it can sell you something.
Affluence & Influence:
It's all about "flow." The affluent have a steady flow of cash; the influential have power flow. And if you're Bill Gates, you've got it all.
Flatulence & Inflation:
Both share the Latin flare, which means "to blow," although with inflate, the "wind" is incoming, a crucial difference.
What's the connection between maneuver and manure? Between glamour and grammar? Anger and angina? At first glance, these words seem to have nothing in common, but in fact they are Words of a Feather, connected by their origins. This cleverly entertaining book explores the shared histories of 150 word pairs (called "dual etymologies") to give language lovers of all ages a fun and powerful vocabulary-building education that's sure to impress.
Adversary & Advertisement:
Both share the same root for "turn." An adversary is someone you don't want to turn away from, lest he shoot you in the back. An advertisement makes you turn toward it, so it can sell you something.
Affluence & Influence:
It's all about "flow." The affluent have a steady flow of cash; the influential have power flow. And if you're Bill Gates, you've got it all.
Flatulence & Inflation:
Both share the Latin flare, which means "to blow," although with inflate, the "wind" is incoming, a crucial difference.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Illustrations
25 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 180 mm
Width: 130 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
295 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-147721-5 (9780071477215)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
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Content
IntroductionEntries: 150 word pairs arranged A to ZAfter Words: Word Factory, Resources, About the Author