Nowadays, “stave off” means to keep at bay, fight off, or defend against. But in its original, noun form, around 1400, the Oxford English Dictionary says, a “stave” was a thin strip of wood that was curved to make a cask or barrel...
“Staves” was originally the plural of “staff,” a long rod or walking stick. So by extension, many kinds of sticks or rods, including the staffs of a lance or other weapon, were known as “staves.”
By the 1600s, “stave” meant “to drive off or beat with a staff or stave; esp. in to stave off, to beat off,” the OED says. While the original use was meant literally, as in to “stave off” an attack on the castle, possibly using lances or other weapons with “staves,” the common uses today are figurative, as in “staving off” a cold.
Home » English language » Why you "stave off" a cold
Monday, March 2, 2015
Why you "stave off" a cold
mariyam | 10:01 AM | English language
From the Language Corner of the Columbia Journalism Review:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
We'll begin with the photograph above (credit here , via BoingBoing 2006): "...the community of Beloit, Wisconsin came together on...
-
The Faulkner Glossary contains both local Mississippi dialect words and the "highfalutin" words of conventional English used by t...
-
YouTube link . Anders Lund Madsen is a professional comedian. These supplemental notes from the uploader/subtitler: The reason i didn'...
-
I learned from reading Collector's Weekly that there are people who collect chewing gum. In the U.S., there are about half a dozen ser...
-
This is likely to have some effect on food prices in the United States. Nearly the entire Golden State – 99.81 percent to be exact — is in t...
-
From the collections of the Musée "Bible et Terre Sainte" - This stone mask from the pre-ceramic neolithic period dates to 7000 ...
-
A tourist seeking to take pictures of Yellowstone National Park crashed a camera-equipped drone into its largest hot spring , possibly dama...
-
My curiosity started with the above image, from a bestiary quiz at Medievalists.net . The creature depicted is identified as a beaver, but ...
-
Herewith three selections from a gallery of iceberg photos at The Telegraph . Top photo credit to Steppes Travel. The beautifully-laminate...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2015
(214)
-
▼
March
(27)
- "Spem in alium" in memory of Terry Pratchett
- Hans Rosling clarifies world demographics
- Dance with your dog (Crufts, 2015)
- "A little inaccuracy sometimes saves a ton of expl...
- A concrete block filled with human teeth
- The Monty Hall Problem explained
- Burning 15 tons of elephant tusks
- Canine agility champion
- A woman sues herself...
- Icebergs
- Emma Thompson - tax protester
- "Southern Cross" (Crosby, Stills, Nash)
- Texas sportscaster speaks out about race relations
- Weaselpecker
- A shiny spot on the dwarf planet Ceres
- St. Bernards prefer spaghetti to salad
- The location of Jeopardy! daily doubles
- A Royal Flycatcher - before and after
- U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe tosses a snowball
- A global rainfall/snowfall map
- Perhaps he was thinking of a fistula
- Why you "stave off" a cold
- The reasons you have eyelashes
- High school spends $662,000 on sports upgrades
- 17th century wearable technology
- "Consider the prison-phone industry"
- The seacoast of Bolivia
-
▼
March
(27)
No comments:
Post a Comment