Monday, March 16, 2020

Of Muscles, Mussels, and Mice

Of Muscles, Mussels, and Mice Of Muscles, Mussels, and Mice Of Muscles, Mussels, and Mice By Maeve Maddox The use of the word mouse to mean computer device began in 1965, but the appearance and movement of mice have influenced language for a long time. The Latin word for mouse is mus. The Romans got the word from Greek mys. The word mussel,( a bivalve mollusk) derives from the Latin diminutive musculus (little mouse.) The little sea creature was thought to resemble a mouse in size and color. The word and spelling muscle to denote contractile tissue dates from the late 14th century. The movement of a muscle, especially the one in the upper arm (biceps), can be compared to that of a mouse moving about under something. According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, the analogy of mouse/muscle already existed in Greek, and double-duty words that can mean either mouse or muscle exist in modern languages as well. Old English spelled the word for the sea animal various ways: mucxle, muscell, muscelle, muscule, musscel, muxle. As might be expected, the spellings of mussel and muscle collided for a while. The spelling mussel to distinguish seafood from bodily tissue was first recorded about 1600, but the distinctive spelling was not fully established until the 1870s. The prefixes my and myo that occur in many medical terms also derive from Greek mys: myalgia: pain in a muscle or group of muscles. myocarditis: inflammation of a a muscle layer of the heart myoplasty: plastic surgery of muscular tissue. The medical terms relate to the muscle connection, but mouse origins are clear in the word myomancy:divination by interpreting the behavior of mice. Finally, just for fun, the Greek letter M is spelled and pronounced mu in English. The Greek vocative form of mys is also spelled mu. This is what happened when an English-speaking curate tried to teach his cat the Greek alphabet: There was a kind curate of Kew †¨ Who kept a large cat in the pew, †¨ Which he taught every week †¨ alphabetical Greek, †¨But got no farther than mu.* *Thanks to Rod Decker Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Vocabulary category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:Definitely use "the" or "a"25 Russian Words Used in English (and 25 More That Should Be)Conversational Email