I've just returned from a six-week trip to India and Europe, an Indo-European
tour, if you will. While I recover from the jetlag, I've arranged an 
Indo-European tour for you, and this one comes with no jetlag. This 
week we'll see five words that have come to us from Indo-European roots.
About 6000 years ago, people in that region spoke a language that was 
the ancestor of most languages now spoken around the world -- languages
as varied as Albanian, English, French, German, Greek, Norwegian, and 
Sanskrit.

There is no written record of the language but linguists now call this
reconstructed language Proto-Indo-European. Let's look at a few words
that trace their origin to this prehistoric source.


facetiae (fuh-SEE-shee-ee) noun

   Witty or humorous remarks or writings.

[From Latin facetia (jest). Ultimately from the Indo-European root dhe-
(to set or put) which is also the source of do, deed, factory, fashion,
face, rectify, defeat, sacrifice, satisfy, Sanskrit sandhi (literally,
joining), Urdu purdah (literally, veil or curtain), and Russian duma
(council).]

-Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)

  "Guy is a writer of facetiae. He asks the tough questions. Why do they
   make so much of Cactus Jack Garner's remark about the Vice Presidency
   not being worth a pitcher of warm spit when 'there really shouldn't be
   anything disgusting about the thought of drinking spit, one's own at
   least, because spit is what is in our mouths all the time'?"
   Christopher Buckley; White House Spouse Tells All; The New York Times;
   Jun 10, 1990.

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............................................................................
The world owes all its onward impulses to men ill at ease. The happy man
inevitably confines himself within ancient limits. -Nathaniel Hawthorne,
novelist and short-story writer (1804-1864)

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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/facetiae.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/facetiae.ram

Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/facetiae.html

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