• Webster Dictionary

    Why Do We Say That?

    Are you an expression-curious person? Curious about words and phrases you might use all the time, but have no idea why we say them or where they come from? I have always loved to investigate wacky etymologies. Etymologies–now there’s a word!

    Etymology is the study of the origins of words. Most words that end in -ology mean “the study of.” Etym comes from the Greek word for, well, “word.” I looked this up in a dictionary I have had since I was a freshman in college, Webster’s New World Dictionary. I still use it today.

    Here are a few more mysterious words and how we came to write and say them:

    When pigs fly means pretty much never, because pigs don’t fly. It is called an adynaton, or a way of saying something that won’t happen. The phrase has been around since the 1600s and is an early form of sarcasm. It was spoken by the Duchess in Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

    Keep your eyes peeled means to keep a close lookout. Peeled in this sense means to keep your eyelids wide open. The phrase used to be, “keep your eyes skinned,” but I think it sounded too gross to keep saying.

    I call dibs! My old dictionary says that a dib is another word for a dibble, a small pointed tool to make a hole in soil to plant seeds. Children in the 19th century played a game called dibstones using dibbles, and to call “dibs” meant they went first in the game.

    Raining cats and dogs is a very old term for heavy rain. It’s not clear how it started, but it might have to do with Norse mythology, ancient superstitions, or clever writers in the 17th century. A famous writer, Jonathan Swift, used it in his satirical writings (satirical means writing that calls attention to silly or pompous people in a funny way).

    Hold your horses means you are doing something too fast, so slow down. There are lots of ideas about how this phrase started, all the way from Greek times to the 19th century when men worked on the Erie Canal hauling freight using horses. It was a common phrase when horses were used in all kinds of jobs and making sure they were under control was very important.

    Don’t be afraid to look up words that you find intriguing, funny, odd, or nonsensical. It’s a fun game to find out where they came from.

  • Buster the Very Shy Dof

    How Buster Came To Live With Us

    The Buster the Very Shy Dog series was inspired by my real pets and their relationships with one another. Not all of my pets have been book-worthy, but I have had a number of dogs and cats with big personalities.

    I already had one dog and four cats when I went across the street to visit the neighbor dog’s litter of puppies. I had no intention of bringing one home. At the bottom of the pile of scrabbling furballs was a small, shy, tailless puppy that took my heart. But how would my other pets treat him? I asked my neighbor if I could take the little puppy home for a minute to see how he would fit in to the household. She had eight puppies to give away and was more than happy to allow it.

    I plunked the puppy down in the middle of the livingroom. He seemed relieved to have a break from his siblings climbing all over him. The cats circled him and left, apparently deciding that since he was smaller than they were, he posed no threat. Phoebe sniffed him thoroughly while he watched her with admiring eyes. She strolled back into the kitchen with a glint in her eye. No doubt, she was ready to relish the role of big sister and was already thinking of ways to trick him into doing what she wanted. He had been accepted into the family. I named him Buster, after Buster Keaton, my favorite actor.

    Even when he grew up to be bigger than all of them put together, Phoebe and the cats always bossed him around. I think Buster still felt like the tiny puppy he was when he first arrived.

     

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