It’s all thanks to Quintilian, the great 1st century Roman orator. In
his book on speeches, Quintilian said that, after you have chosen your
words, they must be weaved together into a fine and delicate fabric — and
the Latin for fabric is textum.
Quintilian’s metaphor has clung on for 2,000 years. We still weave
stories together, embroider them and try never to lose the thread of
the tale. Later classical writers took up text to mean any short passage
in a book.
More recently, we started using text to mean anything that was written
down; and then somebody invented the SMS message, borrowing
Quintilian’s metaphor in the process.
A fascinating book on the weird and wonderful origins of English words has just hit the top of the bestseller list.
Here, Mark Forsyth reveals a few of the best definitions.
1 comment:
That's very interesting! I'm going to see if I can get a copy of the book.
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