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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

780.0. "DIS is dislocated" by TPLAB::KEW (Together in electric dreams) Mon Feb 26 1990 13:05

Some words like "disappear" have the prefix "dis" to mean the opposite.


however, how does one explain the following words? Could one have said at 
one time, "gosh, I feel gruntled today" ?

disabuse
disappoint
disgruntled
disgust


Jerry
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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780.1grunt workLESCOM::KALLISPumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift.Mon Feb 26 1990 15:478
    Re .0 (Jerry):
    
>however, how does one explain the following words? Could one have said at 
>one time, "gosh, I feel gruntled today" ?
 
    I've said that more than once myself.   
                                         
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
780.2SHALOT::ANDERSONGive me a U, give me a TMon Feb 26 1990 16:5413
	All these words were created in the same way -- i.e., "dis-"
	(meaning "opposite of") plus other word.  This is obvious for
	some -- disappear, disintegrate, disagree, etc.  For others,
	though, you have to look at the word's etymology to see this.
	Some example:

	o  disgust -- fr. goust (taste) Middle French
	o  dishabille -- fr. habille (to dress) French
	o  discharge -- fr. carricare (to load) Latin
	o  disheveled -- fr. chevel (hair) Middle French
	o  dismiss -- fr mittere (to send) Latin
	
		-- Cliff
780.3I disgavel you, you cad!AYOV27::ISMITHMr The Fish?Thu Apr 05 1990 14:545
    Not really on the subject (what's new around here? 8^) but I read
    the definition of 'disgavel' last night.  To disgavel is 'To remove
    from the tenure of gavelhood'.  What a wonderful definition.
    
    Ian.