When I was a kid I used to wonder who the first person was
to come up with a word for something and why everyone else agreed to call it by
that name. I imagined these scenes where Man 1 pointed to a dog and said “dog”
(not in English, of course, but considering I think in English, I just went
with it) and everyone around him shrugged and was all, Okay, fine. We’ll call it a dog. Now can we focus on getting out of the
way of this stampede of mastodons? (Once again, the influence of the Flinstones
on my young brain shows itself.)
But what, I wondered, if Man 1 had actually been pointing at
the tree the animal was relieving itself on when he said “dog” and not the
animal itself? And in all the confusion of the whole mastodon stampede, the
other folks had simply taken note of the wrong thing? Now, thousands of years
later, we’re calling dogs, dogs, when really trees were supposed to be dogs.
Or what if Man 1 had been pointing at the dog, so the people
around him were correct in their word usage, but Man 6 (the poor guy bringing
up the rear of the mastodon-fleeing group) had seen the animal first and called
it a “rock,” but the others couldn’t hear him over the stampede? After making
their way to safety, Man 6 realizes the animal followed them and says, “Hey, it’s
the rock!” and everyone else (feeling all arrogant because they managed not to
get crushed) snorts derisively, whispering amongst themselves, “What an idiot.
He doesn’t even know it’s a dog.” And Man 6 gets all flustered and tries to
save face, “No, of course that’s a dog. I was talking about the little thing
over there on the ground. That’s the rock. Obvi.”
Given that this was the weird mess going on in my head, I
constantly pondered if other people were thinking about the same thing that I
was. After doing a little informal survey, I found that the vast majority were…..not.
I lost track of the number of times friends looked at me strangely when I asked
if they every thought that maybe their beloved pet was supposed to be called a
tree, or their parents’ garden was actually meant to be referred to as a forest.
Their response would almost invariably be, “It’s not a forest. It’s a garden.
Forests have lots of trees.” And I’d say, “Yeah. But what if it was supposed to
be that forests are just flowers and gardens have lots of trees? And people
just got mixed up.”
And then they’d walk away.
It didn’t take long for me to figure out that I was probably
crazy. At that point I was still basing this belief off the assumption that if
the majority felt one way, then that was the sane path. Then, wonder of
wonders, I made a fantastic discovery. When it came to word origins my dad
thought about the same things I did! Albeit with less Flinstones involvement.
Probably.
I was talking to my mom about it one day and she told me
that she’d had similar conversations with my dad. So, I naturally went off,
running through the house, screaming like a banshee,
until I found my father. I explained the whole dog/tree/rock conundrum and not
once did that let-me-get-away-from-this-crazy-person
look that I’d seen on so many of friends cross his face. He just sat down and told
me that he often thought about the same kind of thing.
After that, I stopped worrying that I was crazy and just
focused on my queries into word origins.
I mean, I knew I probably was. Crazy, that is. But, at least
I came by it honestly.
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