How do you say ‘sockdolager’ in Esperanto?
de mkj1887, 23 de abril de 2017
Aportes: 5
Idioma: English
mkj1887 (Mostrar perfil) 23 de abril de 2017 15:01:09
Vestitor (Mostrar perfil) 23 de abril de 2017 20:49:59
What about, say, 'skrike'? That's a word from the area where I'm from and it means cry. Tell me why it would need a special translation above 'plori'?
Roch (Mostrar perfil) 24 de abril de 2017 05:20:38
Because some Christian worship services include a doxology, and these hymns therefore were familiar and well-practiced among church choirs, the English word sockdolager arose, a deformation of doxology, which came to mean a "show-stopper", a production number.[citation needed] The Oxford English Dictionary considers it a "fanciful" coinage, but an 1893 speculation reported in the Chicago Tribune as to the origin of the word as one of its early attestationshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doxology
https://eo.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doksologio
mkj1887 (Mostrar perfil) 24 de abril de 2017 14:53:05
Roch:The verb sock ("to punch") and the noun doxology ("a hymn of praise to God") may seem like an odd pairing, but it is a match that has been promoted by a few word mavens when discussing the origins of the Americanism sockdolager. Don't be too quick to believe the hype, however. When a word's origin is simply unknown, as is the case with sockdolager, there's a tendency for folks to fill in the gap with an interesting story, whether or not it can be verified. In the case of sockdolager, the "sock" part is plausible but unproven, and the "doxology" to dolager suggestion is highly questionable. The theory continues to have many fans, but it can't deliver the knockout punch.Because some Christian worship services include a doxology, and these hymns therefore were familiar and well-practiced among church choirs, the English word sockdolager arose, a deformation of doxology, which came to mean a "show-stopper", a production number.[citation needed] The Oxford English Dictionary considers it a "fanciful" coinage, but an 1893 speculation reported in the Chicago Tribune as to the origin of the word as one of its early attestationshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doxology
https://eo.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doksologio
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sockdol...
Roch (Mostrar perfil) 24 de abril de 2017 22:01:42
Might "dislodge" could have something to do with it...