
08-23-2008, 06:24 PM
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A Word Invented For One Incident
A Word Invented For One Incident
I find this interesting.
Quote:
Online Etymology Dictionary
defenestration
1620, "the action of throwing out of a window," from L. fenestra "window." A word invented for one incident: the "Defenestration of Prague," May 21, 1618, when two Catholic deputies to the Bohemian national assembly and a secretary were tossed out the window (into a moat) of the castle of Hradshin by Protestant radicals. It marked the start of the Thirty Years War. Some linguists link fenestra with Gk. verb phainein "to show;" others see in it an Etruscan borrowing, based on the suffix -(s)tra, as in L. loan-words aplustre "the carved stern of a ship with its ornaments," genista "the plant broom," lanista "trainer of gladiators."
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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And it is used today to describe a cause of death.
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