![]() ![]() I also was curious why bad words were really all that bad, much to the chagrin of my parents, who were saints when it came to my endless curiosity.īut when it came to horses, I never questioned the name they were assigned.ĭo you ever wonder why we call things what we do? When I was a kid, I used to wonder what the world would be like if blue was actually yellow, up was supposed to be down, and yes really meant no. ![]() It was elegant and simple, but powerful all at once. When the light bulb I like to call my brain went a’flickering with the idea of writing about the history of horses, it seemed logical to start from the very beginning. ![]() Why do we call them horses, anyway?Ī quick Google search guided me to the Online Etymology Dictionary ( ), which gave me this definition: O.E. Huh? Can anyone read that? Translation, please!Ī little more research (and a look-see through the dictionary on my desk that probably hadn’t been used since the dark ages of The Chronicle) helped me decode the mystery behind the word “horse.” Roß “horse”), of unknown origin, connected by some with PIE base *kurs-, source of L. Old English hors, from Proto-Germanic ( hypothetical prehistoric ancestor of all Germanic languages, including English). *khursa ( words beginning with * are not attested in any written source, but have been reconstructed by etymological analysis) – compare Old Norse hross, Old Frisian hors, Middle Dutch ors, Dutch ros, Old High German hros, German Roß, all meaning “horse,” of unknown origin, connected by some with Proto-Indo-European ( the hypothetical reconstructed ancestral language of the Indo-European family. Time scale is debated, but proposed date is about 5,500 years ago). ![]()
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