26 September 2007

Etymolgy and Entomolgy*, Part 2

The word 'teeny' - anything to do with 'teen'? According to my exhaustive research (I am goddamn exhausted), not in the least.

So 'teen' comes (I think) from 'ten' - via Germanic or Norse languages. Like, in German, 'thirteen' is
dreizehn (literally, 'three ten'). And I assumed that 'teeny' and/or 'teensy' derived from '-teen'.

Not so!

Teeny comes from an alteration of 'tiny' (duh!), modified to resemble the long-e of 'wee'. And teensy is a further modification of 'teeny'.

Now, back to teen. Fascinatingly enough, according to the Online Etymological Dictionary, "
teenager is from 1941 (the earlier word for this was teener, attested in Anmer.Eng. from 1894). Teen-aged (adj.) is from 1952; shortened form teen is from 1951 (though this had been used as a noun to mean "teen-aged person" in 1818)."

Lastly, to address the asterisk in this post's title. In the course of researching this post, I came across the following web page - Teeny Nymph. This is the winner of my annual "Not A Porn Site, Although by All Accounts It Should Be" Award.

What type of fly-fishing lure is this? Well, "Teeny Nymphs are simple shrimp-like flies that are constructed entirely of cock Ring Neck Pheasant tail fibers." That's right. Made out of cock ring.

Huzzah.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Quote "the long-e of 'wee'".

Is the long-e the sound of relief if you have had to wait a long time?