Is there an etymologist in the house?

posted by Rob on August 22, 2007 08:03 AM

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Just pondering the word 'always' and its roots. Glancing at an online dictionary the origin is supposedly:
Origin: 1200-50; ME alwayes, alleweyes, alles weis, gen. (denoting distribution; cf. once) of all wei; alle- lost its gen. ending and was treated as a compounding element under influence of alle wey. So, "always" comes from the germanic for "all ways". Which to my mind doesn't reflect its meaning. "All ways" should mean something like "Anyhow"

But look at the French: toujours. Isn't it weird that if you sort of transliterate it into English you get "all days"? And it's so easy to imagine dropping the 'd' to give "all'ays". Which you could easily spell as "always", or "alwayes". Plus you have a root that seems to mean what it's supposed to mean. If something is true "all days", it's true always. And there are heaps of expressions that were sort of transliterated into English over the years, so it wouldn't be a strange route to take.

Granted, I don't have any citations for my alternative etymology - and I doubt it would stand up to analysis - but you've got to admit, it makes a lot more sense than the version in the dictionaries.

Which leads us to one inescapable conclusion I would say. Sooner or later, I'm going to have to clear another ten feet of shelf space and buy a nice, old leatherbound copy of the OED.

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Comments: 1


Your derivation does seem to make more sense.

Drifting off on a tangent to the true meaning of always/anyway, I love the way Yorkshire English uses the expression 'Any road' or even 'any road up' to mean anyway.

Isn't language wonderful?

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