![]() ![]() As he puts it, his goal is to "leave the reader with a sense of where many modern usages may have come from, or in some cases have strayed, whether we choose to think of the changes as corruptions or improvements."Study the altered meanings in this erudite but full book and you'll be able to "razzle-dazzle" (originally, a daylong drinking bout) your friends and acquaintances. Then, "improve" meant "to make progress in that which is evil." And there was no romantic "tryst" with a man or woman then the word meant "a fair for black cattle, horses, and sheep"!Author Jeffrey Kacirk, a man intrigued by words, has sifted through mountains of discarded meanings to arrive at almost 1,500 entries in this fascinating romp through the ever-changing world of lexicography. About the Author Jeffrey Kacirk is the author of Forgotten English, The Word Museum, and Altered English, as well as a daily calendar based on Forgotten. This process is a continuous one, as can be seen in today's word "bad, " whose meaning is now its own opposite: "great." As another example, consider England 500 years ago. FORGOTTEN ENGLISH III Long Lost Insults Knowledge Cards By Jeffrey Kacirk, MINT - 7.41. ![]() Past homes found in Sausalito CA and Tiburon CA. ![]() Over the Centuries, innumerable English words have drifted from their original purposes and acquired vastly diferent meanings - some subtle and others not so. Jeffrey Kacirk is 71 yrs old and lives on Petaluma Way in Petaluma, CA. ![]()
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