mercoledì 23 settembre 2009

Etymology of apple and coffe...


Nothing is better than etymology, the science of the origin of words, to memorize foreign words. I like sometimes to enjoy a cup of coffe with an apple strudel... So, lets start our journey into History and linguistic curiosities with a couple of words: apple, and coffee...

-- Apple --
English: Apple / German: Apfel / Russian: Яблоко, pron. yabloko
from Indo-European root: *
abol. It is a very old northern European’s word which is also concealed in city names such as Avella (in ancient times Abella, i.e. ‘city of the apples’), small city of Avellino’s province in Italy, and Avallon in France.
It is only from the 17th Century, that the term ‘apple’ was associated with the prohibited tree’s fruit in the Genesis.

Italian: Mela / Romanian: Măr
comes from Latin malum that takes origin from ancient Greek mêlon. An old generic Mediterranean term used to indicate also other seed fruits, like peer, quince, and so on.

French
: Pomme / Catalan: Poma
It comes from Latin root pomum which means ‘fruit’. Is maybe associated with the Sanskrit word phala,
‘fruit, apple’.

Spanish: Manzana / Portuguese: Maçã
It comes from popular Latin : mattiana, abbreviation of “mala mattiana”, in literary terms ‘apple of Mattius’, from the agronomist’s name who spread this kind of apple.

In other languages with non alphabetic writings, ‘apple’ is written in this way...

Chinese: in traditional Chinese, apple is written: 蘋果 (pron. píng guǒ); in simplified Chinese: 苹果. The second character 果 of the word means ‘fruit’ and is made with the pictograms 田 and 木 together symbolizing a fruit on a tree.

Japanese: Japanese people use two different writings in concomitance with the Chinese characters called ‘kanji’: the sillabic katakana and hiragana characters are used to write words in a ‘phonetic’ way.
Apple in kanji’s writing is as follows: 林檎 (pron. ringo ), in katakana: リンゴ, and in hiragana: りんご.

-- Coffee --
The word coffee, one of the symbols par excellence of the Italian ‘dolce vita’, comes from Arabian
qaHwat (al-bûnn), i.e. ‘wine (of the bean)’, in Arabic قهوة.
Originally it identified a stimulating drink produced by a juice extract from some seeds that was drank as a dark red liquid.
Thanks to the Venitian ambassador in Constantinople, Gianfrancesco Morosini, in 1585, we get the first report of coffee’ consumption: "Turkish people here stay sit on the floor and spend their time drinking together, in shops as well in the street, a black and hot water obtained from a seed called cavèe, which has the virtue to maintain people awake".
So, the word passed from Turkish (
kahvé), to Venetian (cavèe) and, from Venetian to today’s Italian (caffè) and finally to English (coffee).

English: Coffee (drink). Coffee bar or café (public place).

French, Catalan, Spanish, and Portuguese: Café (drink and public place).
In French slang, however, we pronounce 'caoua', like in Arabian!
The word indicates also a public place where the coffee itself is drank.

German: Kaffee (drink). Gastwirtschaft or Café (public place).

Russian: Кофе kòfye (drink). Кафе kàfye (public place).
A Russian saying: “The coffee, to be good, must be black like the night, sweet like love and hot like hell”.

In other languages with non alphabetic writings, ‘coffee’ is written in this way...

Chinese: 咖啡, pron. kā fēi. As coffee doesn’t belong to Chinese culture, the word ‘coffee’ is adapted from Italian, and is written with phonetic symbols used precisely to write foreign words.

Japanese: katakana: コーヒー, hiragana: こうひい, pron. kuhii.

9 commenti:

  1. I know this post is old, but I stumble on it while studying Japanese. I would like to point out two things.
    1) Coffee in Japanese actually has a kanji (borrowed from Chinese) 珈琲. You would still read it as kōhī even though those are not the readings of the individual kanji.
    2) While りんご is the Japanese word for apple. In the case of an apple strudel the whole thing woud probably be written in katakana and pronounced phonetically as アップ ストルード (ap-pu su-to-ru-do).

    RispondiElimina
  2. Questo commento è stato eliminato dall'autore.

    RispondiElimina
  3. A django course introduces web framework concepts with simplified explanations. It provides practical examples to improve technical understanding. This django course includes real-time coding exercises. It enhances application structure and database connectivity knowledge. Students gain project-building experience. It is dependable and career-oriented.

    RispondiElimina
  4. A django course helps learners understand the fundamentals of backend web development using the Django framework. It explains application structure, URL routing, models, and templates clearly. This django course helps students develop strong programming knowledge. Learners practice coding through exercises and examples. Projects provide experience in building functional web applications. The course prepares learners for professional web development roles.

    RispondiElimina
  5. Excellent post! Learn dell boomi training
    to automate workflows and connect applications efficiently with practical, job-ready training.

    RispondiElimina
  6. Ab Initio Developer Training
    Ab Initio developer training ab initio developer training focuses on building the skills required to design and develop ETL graphs efficiently. It covers key components like data transformation, debugging, and performance optimization. With hands-on practice, learners can gain confidence in handling real-time data challenges. This training is essential for those aspiring to become skilled ETL developers.

    RispondiElimina
  7. An iOS app development course helps learners build strong skills in creating mobile applications for Apple devices like iPhone and iPad. It explains Swift programming, Xcode tools, and application architecture clearly. This ios app development course helps students gain practical experience through real-time exercises. Learners work on projects to build functional applications. The course prepares learners for careers in iOS development.

    RispondiElimina
  8. Very informative! data modeling class
    helps translate business requirements into clear database designs for better system efficiency.

    RispondiElimina
  9. Great post! Our dell boomi course
    helps professionals master cloud integration and automation. Learn workflow design, API management, and deployment with hands-on projects for real-world enterprise solutions.

    RispondiElimina