What are some good sites for researching etymology?Are there any good books or articles on the etymology of dermatology-related terminology and/or cutaneous condition names?Why are there two pronunciations for “either”?What is the etymology of “…kick ass and take names”?What is the etymology of “golden boy”?What is the origin of the phrase “forty winks,” meaning a short nap?Meaning of the “rupt” suffix/prefixOrigin of “Erry” (every)“Birds and bees” originsWhat is the etymology of the phrase “Holy Trinity”?What is the etymology of WERE in the Second Conditional?Looking for an old limerick mentioning a character named “Lady Jane”
Given this phrasing in the lease, when should I pay my rent?
Can I run 125kHz RF circuit on a breadboard?
What the heck is gets(stdin) on site coderbyte?
Is there a RAID 0 Equivalent for RAM?
Personal or impersonal in a technical resume
What does "Scientists rise up against statistical significance" mean? (Comment in Nature)
Why didn't Voldemort know what Grindelwald looked like?
Identifying "long and narrow" polygons in with PostGIS
Can you identify this lizard-like creature I observed in the UK?
How were servants to the Kaiser of Imperial Germany treated and where may I find more information on them
Check if object is null and return null
How to make money from a browser who sees 5 seconds into the future of any web page?
Deciphering cause of death?
Why can't the Brexit deadlock in the UK parliament be solved with a plurality vote?
What should be the ideal length of sentences in a blog post for ease of reading?
What does "tick" mean in this sentence?
In One Punch Man, is King actually weak?
What happens if I try to grapple an illusory duplicate from the Mirror Image spell?
Why does the Persian emissary display a string of crowned skulls?
How do you justify more code being written by following clean code practices?
How much do grades matter for a future academia position?
The Digit Triangles
Limit max CPU usage SQL SERVER with WSRM
Echo with obfuscation
What are some good sites for researching etymology?
Are there any good books or articles on the etymology of dermatology-related terminology and/or cutaneous condition names?Why are there two pronunciations for “either”?What is the etymology of “…kick ass and take names”?What is the etymology of “golden boy”?What is the origin of the phrase “forty winks,” meaning a short nap?Meaning of the “rupt” suffix/prefixOrigin of “Erry” (every)“Birds and bees” originsWhat is the etymology of the phrase “Holy Trinity”?What is the etymology of WERE in the Second Conditional?Looking for an old limerick mentioning a character named “Lady Jane”
I'm wondering about the origins of a particular word and, while my first thought was to ask the ELU community, I decided I should do the work myself.
Where should I start looking? I'd love to see some suggestions.
etymology research
add a comment |
I'm wondering about the origins of a particular word and, while my first thought was to ask the ELU community, I decided I should do the work myself.
Where should I start looking? I'd love to see some suggestions.
etymology research
5
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it should be migrated to meta.
– Mitch
Mar 17 at 15:17
@Mitch We cannot migrate questions this old to meta.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
The information can be copied and pasted into the resource post or something else on meta. I'm not sure why you reopened this @tchrist.
– Laurel
2 days ago
@Laurel I suppose they could be, but I would not be comfortable making believe that other people's answers were my own.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
I'm wondering about the origins of a particular word and, while my first thought was to ask the ELU community, I decided I should do the work myself.
Where should I start looking? I'd love to see some suggestions.
etymology research
I'm wondering about the origins of a particular word and, while my first thought was to ask the ELU community, I decided I should do the work myself.
Where should I start looking? I'd love to see some suggestions.
etymology research
etymology research
edited Dec 16 '13 at 12:46
community wiki
4 revs, 3 users 43%
J.T. Grimes
5
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it should be migrated to meta.
– Mitch
Mar 17 at 15:17
@Mitch We cannot migrate questions this old to meta.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
The information can be copied and pasted into the resource post or something else on meta. I'm not sure why you reopened this @tchrist.
– Laurel
2 days ago
@Laurel I suppose they could be, but I would not be comfortable making believe that other people's answers were my own.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
5
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it should be migrated to meta.
– Mitch
Mar 17 at 15:17
@Mitch We cannot migrate questions this old to meta.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
The information can be copied and pasted into the resource post or something else on meta. I'm not sure why you reopened this @tchrist.
– Laurel
2 days ago
@Laurel I suppose they could be, but I would not be comfortable making believe that other people's answers were my own.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
5
5
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it should be migrated to meta.
– Mitch
Mar 17 at 15:17
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it should be migrated to meta.
– Mitch
Mar 17 at 15:17
@Mitch We cannot migrate questions this old to meta.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
@Mitch We cannot migrate questions this old to meta.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
The information can be copied and pasted into the resource post or something else on meta. I'm not sure why you reopened this @tchrist.
– Laurel
2 days ago
The information can be copied and pasted into the resource post or something else on meta. I'm not sure why you reopened this @tchrist.
– Laurel
2 days ago
@Laurel I suppose they could be, but I would not be comfortable making believe that other people's answers were my own.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
@Laurel I suppose they could be, but I would not be comfortable making believe that other people's answers were my own.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
etymonline is a great resource for looking up specific words.
If you are at a university, you might have OED access, which is the most in-depth and hardcore etymology resource (if you can get to it).
Take Our Word For It is a fun website for browsing through and learning about etymologies in a more entertaining, less structured way.
3
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
1
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
add a comment |
General purpose:
- Online Etymology Dictionary
Google Books, set date range and sort by date*- Google Ngram Viewer
- Bill Mullins has a giant list of Full Text Databases
- Internet Archive
- Project Gutenberg
- HathiTrust Digital Library
- Topsy for Tweets
The Right Rhymes: hop-hop slang defined
Rap Stats by Rap Genius gives an idea of earliest use, but cannot be searched by time
Newspapers:
- USA: Chronicling America (1836-1922) by the Library of Congress
- Australia: Trove (-1954) by the National Library of Australia
- New Zealand: Papers Past (1839-1945) by the Nation Library of New Zealand
Particularly for computing terms:
Google Groups for Usenet archives (also good for slang) (1981 - present)
DSpace@MIT for the CSAIL archives (1959 - present)- IETF's RFC archive (1969 - present)
PDP-10 software archive (~1967 - ~1990), for old source code
Tech Model Railroad Club dictionary, TMRC 1st & 2nd editions (1959, 1960)
The Jargon File and its archives (also here) (1981 - 2003)- MIT's The Tech newspaper archives (1881 - present)
Bitsavers' Software and PDF Document Archive (misc. dates)
* Care must be taken with Google Books' metadata, especially when only a snippet is shown: occasionally the book was published later than the the year Google claims it was, and sometimes they accidentally include multiple books for each record.
Therefore it's important to double check the date: scroll up to confirm the real date for "full view" books, and for preview/"snippet view" verify with another source (such as the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg or the HathiTrust Digital Library).
add a comment |
I would also like to add our etymology dictionary that draws directed etymology graphs called Etymologeek.com.
Here is an example of a directed graph:
It works in multiple languages, providing etymology data, descendants, related words and more. It also has a pretty quick search, and the index is constantly growing in the number of words and slowly growing in accuracy too.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "97"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f2701%2fwhat-are-some-good-sites-for-researching-etymology%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
etymonline is a great resource for looking up specific words.
If you are at a university, you might have OED access, which is the most in-depth and hardcore etymology resource (if you can get to it).
Take Our Word For It is a fun website for browsing through and learning about etymologies in a more entertaining, less structured way.
3
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
1
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
add a comment |
etymonline is a great resource for looking up specific words.
If you are at a university, you might have OED access, which is the most in-depth and hardcore etymology resource (if you can get to it).
Take Our Word For It is a fun website for browsing through and learning about etymologies in a more entertaining, less structured way.
3
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
1
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
add a comment |
etymonline is a great resource for looking up specific words.
If you are at a university, you might have OED access, which is the most in-depth and hardcore etymology resource (if you can get to it).
Take Our Word For It is a fun website for browsing through and learning about etymologies in a more entertaining, less structured way.
etymonline is a great resource for looking up specific words.
If you are at a university, you might have OED access, which is the most in-depth and hardcore etymology resource (if you can get to it).
Take Our Word For It is a fun website for browsing through and learning about etymologies in a more entertaining, less structured way.
edited Sep 7 '10 at 18:50
community wiki
2 revs
Kosmonaut
3
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
1
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
add a comment |
3
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
1
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
3
3
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
All great suggestions. In my experience a lot of phrase or word etymologies will appear in one source but won't appear in another or vice versa, so my favorite method is still to just google each one and include the word etymology.
– Dan
Sep 7 '10 at 19:30
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
+! for OED, my absolute favorite–still pricy, good note on uni access
– Charlie
Sep 9 '10 at 0:57
1
1
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
+1 again for the OED. Many public libraries also have OED access, depending on where you live.
– PLL
Nov 8 '11 at 13:55
add a comment |
General purpose:
- Online Etymology Dictionary
Google Books, set date range and sort by date*- Google Ngram Viewer
- Bill Mullins has a giant list of Full Text Databases
- Internet Archive
- Project Gutenberg
- HathiTrust Digital Library
- Topsy for Tweets
The Right Rhymes: hop-hop slang defined
Rap Stats by Rap Genius gives an idea of earliest use, but cannot be searched by time
Newspapers:
- USA: Chronicling America (1836-1922) by the Library of Congress
- Australia: Trove (-1954) by the National Library of Australia
- New Zealand: Papers Past (1839-1945) by the Nation Library of New Zealand
Particularly for computing terms:
Google Groups for Usenet archives (also good for slang) (1981 - present)
DSpace@MIT for the CSAIL archives (1959 - present)- IETF's RFC archive (1969 - present)
PDP-10 software archive (~1967 - ~1990), for old source code
Tech Model Railroad Club dictionary, TMRC 1st & 2nd editions (1959, 1960)
The Jargon File and its archives (also here) (1981 - 2003)- MIT's The Tech newspaper archives (1881 - present)
Bitsavers' Software and PDF Document Archive (misc. dates)
* Care must be taken with Google Books' metadata, especially when only a snippet is shown: occasionally the book was published later than the the year Google claims it was, and sometimes they accidentally include multiple books for each record.
Therefore it's important to double check the date: scroll up to confirm the real date for "full view" books, and for preview/"snippet view" verify with another source (such as the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg or the HathiTrust Digital Library).
add a comment |
General purpose:
- Online Etymology Dictionary
Google Books, set date range and sort by date*- Google Ngram Viewer
- Bill Mullins has a giant list of Full Text Databases
- Internet Archive
- Project Gutenberg
- HathiTrust Digital Library
- Topsy for Tweets
The Right Rhymes: hop-hop slang defined
Rap Stats by Rap Genius gives an idea of earliest use, but cannot be searched by time
Newspapers:
- USA: Chronicling America (1836-1922) by the Library of Congress
- Australia: Trove (-1954) by the National Library of Australia
- New Zealand: Papers Past (1839-1945) by the Nation Library of New Zealand
Particularly for computing terms:
Google Groups for Usenet archives (also good for slang) (1981 - present)
DSpace@MIT for the CSAIL archives (1959 - present)- IETF's RFC archive (1969 - present)
PDP-10 software archive (~1967 - ~1990), for old source code
Tech Model Railroad Club dictionary, TMRC 1st & 2nd editions (1959, 1960)
The Jargon File and its archives (also here) (1981 - 2003)- MIT's The Tech newspaper archives (1881 - present)
Bitsavers' Software and PDF Document Archive (misc. dates)
* Care must be taken with Google Books' metadata, especially when only a snippet is shown: occasionally the book was published later than the the year Google claims it was, and sometimes they accidentally include multiple books for each record.
Therefore it's important to double check the date: scroll up to confirm the real date for "full view" books, and for preview/"snippet view" verify with another source (such as the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg or the HathiTrust Digital Library).
add a comment |
General purpose:
- Online Etymology Dictionary
Google Books, set date range and sort by date*- Google Ngram Viewer
- Bill Mullins has a giant list of Full Text Databases
- Internet Archive
- Project Gutenberg
- HathiTrust Digital Library
- Topsy for Tweets
The Right Rhymes: hop-hop slang defined
Rap Stats by Rap Genius gives an idea of earliest use, but cannot be searched by time
Newspapers:
- USA: Chronicling America (1836-1922) by the Library of Congress
- Australia: Trove (-1954) by the National Library of Australia
- New Zealand: Papers Past (1839-1945) by the Nation Library of New Zealand
Particularly for computing terms:
Google Groups for Usenet archives (also good for slang) (1981 - present)
DSpace@MIT for the CSAIL archives (1959 - present)- IETF's RFC archive (1969 - present)
PDP-10 software archive (~1967 - ~1990), for old source code
Tech Model Railroad Club dictionary, TMRC 1st & 2nd editions (1959, 1960)
The Jargon File and its archives (also here) (1981 - 2003)- MIT's The Tech newspaper archives (1881 - present)
Bitsavers' Software and PDF Document Archive (misc. dates)
* Care must be taken with Google Books' metadata, especially when only a snippet is shown: occasionally the book was published later than the the year Google claims it was, and sometimes they accidentally include multiple books for each record.
Therefore it's important to double check the date: scroll up to confirm the real date for "full view" books, and for preview/"snippet view" verify with another source (such as the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg or the HathiTrust Digital Library).
General purpose:
- Online Etymology Dictionary
Google Books, set date range and sort by date*- Google Ngram Viewer
- Bill Mullins has a giant list of Full Text Databases
- Internet Archive
- Project Gutenberg
- HathiTrust Digital Library
- Topsy for Tweets
The Right Rhymes: hop-hop slang defined
Rap Stats by Rap Genius gives an idea of earliest use, but cannot be searched by time
Newspapers:
- USA: Chronicling America (1836-1922) by the Library of Congress
- Australia: Trove (-1954) by the National Library of Australia
- New Zealand: Papers Past (1839-1945) by the Nation Library of New Zealand
Particularly for computing terms:
Google Groups for Usenet archives (also good for slang) (1981 - present)
DSpace@MIT for the CSAIL archives (1959 - present)- IETF's RFC archive (1969 - present)
PDP-10 software archive (~1967 - ~1990), for old source code
Tech Model Railroad Club dictionary, TMRC 1st & 2nd editions (1959, 1960)
The Jargon File and its archives (also here) (1981 - 2003)- MIT's The Tech newspaper archives (1881 - present)
Bitsavers' Software and PDF Document Archive (misc. dates)
* Care must be taken with Google Books' metadata, especially when only a snippet is shown: occasionally the book was published later than the the year Google claims it was, and sometimes they accidentally include multiple books for each record.
Therefore it's important to double check the date: scroll up to confirm the real date for "full view" books, and for preview/"snippet view" verify with another source (such as the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg or the HathiTrust Digital Library).
edited May 23 '14 at 13:12
community wiki
7 revs
Hugo
add a comment |
add a comment |
I would also like to add our etymology dictionary that draws directed etymology graphs called Etymologeek.com.
Here is an example of a directed graph:
It works in multiple languages, providing etymology data, descendants, related words and more. It also has a pretty quick search, and the index is constantly growing in the number of words and slowly growing in accuracy too.
add a comment |
I would also like to add our etymology dictionary that draws directed etymology graphs called Etymologeek.com.
Here is an example of a directed graph:
It works in multiple languages, providing etymology data, descendants, related words and more. It also has a pretty quick search, and the index is constantly growing in the number of words and slowly growing in accuracy too.
add a comment |
I would also like to add our etymology dictionary that draws directed etymology graphs called Etymologeek.com.
Here is an example of a directed graph:
It works in multiple languages, providing etymology data, descendants, related words and more. It also has a pretty quick search, and the index is constantly growing in the number of words and slowly growing in accuracy too.
I would also like to add our etymology dictionary that draws directed etymology graphs called Etymologeek.com.
Here is an example of a directed graph:
It works in multiple languages, providing etymology data, descendants, related words and more. It also has a pretty quick search, and the index is constantly growing in the number of words and slowly growing in accuracy too.
answered Mar 17 at 14:52
community wiki
lyzazel
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f2701%2fwhat-are-some-good-sites-for-researching-etymology%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
5
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it should be migrated to meta.
– Mitch
Mar 17 at 15:17
@Mitch We cannot migrate questions this old to meta.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago
The information can be copied and pasted into the resource post or something else on meta. I'm not sure why you reopened this @tchrist.
– Laurel
2 days ago
@Laurel I suppose they could be, but I would not be comfortable making believe that other people's answers were my own.
– tchrist♦
2 days ago