Also, it’s only a true gargoyle if it comes from the gargling region of France. Anything else is just a sparkling grotesque.
Gargouille.
Etymology of the word gargoyle, for anyone else who read the linked list in its entirety and found that gargoyle is not on it:
https://www.etymonline.com/word/gargoyle
Rather than the sound of water, it seems to refer to the throat of the statue through which water passes, which sounds like gargle in several languages. Several sites say it’s an onomatopoeia for the statue gargling water but I can’t find that reference specifically, except that the root words for gargle from Latin might be an onomatopoeia for the sound of gargling.
If the statue is purely ornamental without the function for water to pass through it, it’s called a grotesque, chimera, or boss, so obviously I’m going to call them all bosses now.
Garganta means throat in Spanish, so I’ve learnt something about the origins of that word now :)
Like a boss!
Haha, I really want to show someone around New York or some larger city and point up and just be like “and you can see four bosses up there” and then get to explain what I mean.
I wonder if those lions in front of libraries are bosses too, or if bosses have to be rooftop statues?
Sandwiches are named after a Welsh peasant dish that originally consisted of witch meat between two bricks of baked sand. It was terrible and offered little nutritional value, but was very popular due to the great availability of witch meat and lack of any real alternatives for nourishment.
I don’t know enough Welsh to refute this
Additional fun fact: “sandwich” is a degraded version of the original Welsh spelling, which is “syynndwrrrccchhchch,” and which was originally pronounced “klerb.”
Onomatopoeia is itself an onomatopoeia because that’s the sound it makes when you say the word.
That’s how most words work though?
Not in fucking english lol
Welll my friend Tony goes by the nickname Ptoniegh, so he can probably back you up
deleted by creator
All of the best ones
Sandwiches are named after the Earl of Sandwich right? Have there been further developments?
He’s still dead.
Thanks but
Next time please use the spoiler tag, sheesh 🙄
We keep finding more and more variations to eat.
Like hot dogs and tacos, depending on your sandwich alignment.
I believe in cube rule supremacy
No, no! Salad Theory is clearly the only acceptable foodstuff categorization theory.
lol I had a coworker show me this and we went crazy with it.
The only food I could think of that didn’t fall into any of the categories is Shepards pie. Starch only on the top. What do you think it should fall under?
upside down/Australian toast?
My headcanon is that Earl of Sandwich had a dream one night where some mystery people from Sahara, the Sand Witches, showed up, and went like “yesss, a slice of bread, yesss, now put some stuff on it, yesss, maybe more slices of bread and more stuff and so on but that is optional. But we must go. Bye!” And thus was born a simple delicacy known worldwide.
None
The sandwich is named for the sound of gargling dry white bread and overly processed deli meats that sandwich eaters made before the invention of garlic aoli.
Anyone else picture a drooling Homer Simpson?
I’d heard the sandwich story before, but had no clew about some of the others!
Surely, the clew is the corner of the sail where the sheet attaches, but that isn’t important right now
“Stop calling me Shirley.”
but had no clew about some of the others!
ostrachise
Huh? I thoght ancient greeks played with the idea of democracy but were mostly monarchistic?
ostracheese
Mmmm. Cheese from ostrich milk
Athens was a democracy, at least for a little bit
Totally interesting until you look it up to find there’s no truth to it.
It’s kinda true, but less exciting than the person made it sound.
gargoyle (n.)
“grotesque carved waterspout,” connected to the gutter of a building to throw down water clear of the wall … from Old French gargole
gargle (v.)
1520s, from French gargouiller “to gurgle, bubble” (14c.), from Old French gargole “throat, waterspout”
Those are two different words though. If the OP had said they were related I wouldn’t protest because they likely are. But they stated it as a fact, which we do not know to be true.
In french, gargoyle is “gargouille”. The verb to gargle is “gargouiller”. Used in a sentence, the word is the exact same. “Il se gargouille”/“He gargles”.
I don’t know, to me it seems pretty clear they’re related.
Related yes, “comes from” (the claim made here) we don’t know that for sure
I mean, that can be said for literally everything, no? What kind of proof would you need? Everything about languages and the evolution of words is studied by experts, and I am not one of them, so what else can I do but take their word for it?
If you look up their ethymology online, they are both from the same word. The wikitionary entry also claims it does come from it. https://fr.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/gargouille