Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
Sam Nankivell wrote:I recently registered to the ARMA forums and am wondering why ARMA has decided to use the term spathology to denote the study of swords.
The term is a combination of the latin term Spatha; referring to a sword used in the late Roman Empire which is longer than the Gladius, and the suffix -ology; from the greek word Logos; meaning knowledge or science (not quite sure on Logos since I am only a student of Latin and not Greek). Wouldn't it be better and look more professional to use a term fully derived from one language (in this case Xiphology, derived fully from Greek; meaning study of swords) than use a portmateau of words from two languages.
On a side note, has anyone every even heard of a Two-Handed Saber? MyArmoury.com claims it was quite a popular weapon during the Renaissance, but I cannot find any other material about it.
Code: Select all
Code: Select all
As far as I know the word logos pertains to knowledge of a certain subject and the xiphos is the classical, straight bladed, Greek, cut and thrust sword. Now the word spatha is used to refer to the late Roman cavalry sword, however, it latinised from the Greek spathe meaning a broad blade, in other words even in the late Roman empire it was probably something of a generic term. To back this up the word spatha is the linguistic ancestor of the modern Italian word spada which is, as far as I know, a broad, genric term refering to swords as a whole.
Jake_Norwood wrote:Let's not get too excited about a particular name for "sword" in a particular language only referring to a particular model of sword. It doesn't quite work so cut-and-dried.
Mark Driggs wrote:Your question however has piqued my interest in the historical entomology of the word 'spathology'. Do any of the other amatuer (professional?) linguists on this board know of the first instance of the word 'spathology'? I'd like to say Oakshott, but I don't have any of his books (yet).
Jeremiah Backhaus wrote:Mark Driggs wrote:Your question however has piqued my interest in the historical entomology of the word 'spathology'. Do any of the other amatuer (professional?) linguists on this board know of the first instance of the word 'spathology'? I'd like to say Oakshott, but I don't have any of his books (yet).
I don't mean to knit-pick, but the term is "etymology." Entomology is the study of insects, mostly by disecting them.
Jake_Norwood wrote:Well, as a linguist-guy and student of Anglo saxon...I'm going to nit-pick, but mostly just for fun.
English is definitely a Germanic language--not to say it's descended from German, but that it and German share a common ancestors. And German has deviated *way* less from the base than English has.
It's estimated that 70% of English vocabulary comes from French and Latin. It has borrowed more into its vocabulary from outside of it's base (Germanic) than maybe any other major language in the world. It is, in truth, almost a Franco-Latin/Germanic pidgin...just one that's been around so long it's gone past that. As they say, the difference between a language and a dialect is a navy and an army.
But even with so little Germanic vocabulary, the base 200 words of English are all Germanic, as is the base grammar (both syntax and native morphology), not to mention our pronunciation of basic phonemes all fall under Grimm's law, which differentiates Germanic Languages from all other Indo-European languages.
Fun, huh?
Jake
Stacy Clifford wrote:That picture is on this page:
http://www.thearma.org/spotlight/heymr.htm
Gorgeous piece:
http://www.thearma.org/spotlight/heymr/heymr58_lg.jpg
Jeremiah Backhaus wrote:
Out of curiosity, what do you mean by "base grammar?" I see a connection between necessary building blocks (subject, verb, modifiers) but things get a little funny after that (inverted word order, transposed word order, extended attrinute clauses (which I love)).
Languages and fun, sometimes I think those two words only go together in my dreams...
-Jeremiah
Return to “Research and Training Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||