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- Xref: sparky alt.polyamory:1856 alt.romance:14407 soc.singles:31510 alt.sex:37195 alt.pagan:13203
- Newsgroups: alt.polyamory,alt.romance,soc.singles,alt.sex,alt.pagan
- Path: sparky!uunet!digex.com!huston
- From: huston@access.digex.com (Herb Huston)
- Subject: Quiz (was Re: Religious bigot ?)
- Message-ID: <By4vBI.J30@access.digex.com>
- Sender: usenet@access.digex.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: access.digex.com
- Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA
- References: <1992Nov15.080923.400@deeptht.armory.com> <1992Nov17.153659.2 <1992Nov20.062708.3878@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 19:54:53 GMT
- Lines: 43
-
- In article <1992Nov20.062708.3878@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> thester@nyx.cs.du.edu (Uncle Fester) writes:
- >In article <BxzJ74.Kzw@access.digex.com> huston@access.digex.com (Herb Hu
- >ton) writes:
- > >It's an example of folk etymology.
-
- [my own example deleted]
-
- > I hate to break into this thread, but I found your example of folk
- >etymology quite interesting.
-
- Thank you.
-
- > I would like to contribute the following:
- >Now, I _cannot_ verify this, so don't ask my source. I don't remember.
- >Maybe someone else has heard of it and can help out.
- >Anyway, if you look in the dictionary (the ones I have, at least) at
- >the entry for the word "quiz", it will say origin unknown. This is
- >the way it was related to me: About (number unknown) years ago, a couple
- >of guys made a bet. One of them claimed that he could create a word
- >that would within days, be on everyones lips. So the other took him up
- >on it. Soon, everyone was asking what "quiz" meant. (He had written the
- >word in many places, graffiti style) What with everyone asking what the
- >word meant, it evolved itself into the lexicon as 'the act of questioning'.
- >It's also ironic that one of the definitions for 'quiz' is that of 'a
- >practical joke, or hoax.
- >
- >Anybody else heard this story?
-
- Someone named Robert Hendrickson contributed an article on "20 Invented Words"
- to _The People's Almanac #2_, and one of the words was "quiz."
-
- ... The tale may be apocryphal, but it's said that Dublin theater manager
- James Daly (late 18th century) bet that he could invent and introduce
- a new meaningless word into the language almost overnight. He proceeded
- to pay Dublin urchins to chalk the word _quiz_ on every wall in town.
- By morning all Dubliners had seen the word, and because no one knew what
- it meant, the meaningless "quiz" soon became the word for a test of know-
- ledge.
-
- Emma Williams, are you still reading this news group?
-
- -- Herb Huston
- -- huston@access.digex.com
-