Bowl (game)

“Bowl”, to play a game which involves rolling a ball, which is obscurely spelled “bowl”  comes from Latin through French.

 “Bowl” the vessel for food and drink, can be found here.

 

  • 8.029 and bowled them over,
  • 8.092 shooting at the wand, bowls, ninepins

 

“bowl, n.2.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 28 June 2016.

“bowl, v.1.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 28 June 2016.

Bowl (vessel)

My word.  “Bowl” the vessel for food and drink, described loosely in the OED as wider than a cup, comes from Norse and German roots and is related to “skull”.  Well there’s our vivid startling imagery for the day!

“Bowl”, to play a game which involves rolling a ball, which is obscurely spelled “bowl”  comes from Latin through French.

So!  Two completely different words.  Shall we separate them out?  I think in this case we ought.  Here’s the one related to food:

  • 1.066 Dump the crocks in a boiling bowl;
  • 7.093 others bore on their broad backs trays with bowls
  • 8.044 all round like the edges of a great bowl,
  • 8.071 The elvish folk were passing bowls from hand to hand
  • 9.025 and for smaller bowls
  • 13.039 out of one of Beorn’s wooden bowls!’
  • 13.046 and bowls

“bowl, n.1.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 28 June 2016.

“bowl, n.2.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 28 June 2016.

“bowl, v.1.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 28 June 2016.

Bee

We have gotten into a marvellous discussion about the word “hive” here at home.  Is it a food word, as frying-pan is?  We have already made the “sentient beings are friends, not food” call when mentioning bees and delved into the question of bees and dairy cattle with vigour.

For today, we will skip “hive” yet include “bee”.

  • 7.023 and hives of great fierce bees,
  • 7.025 Bees were busy everywhere.
  • 7.025 and such bees!
  • 7.031 The noise of the giant bees flying to

Animal

“Animal” does not appear before chapter 7 and is used almost exclusively in that chapter.  While the word comes up in a deliberate statement that Beorn does not consider them food, the obvious implication is a contrast with many other folks’ use of the word – or at least of the concept.

For those of you whose interest in philology was also piqued by the first chapter of Ivanhoe, lo these many years ago, I will add that “animal” is from French and Latin by interesting and circuitous routes.

  • 07.023 neither does he hunt or eat wild animals.
  • 07.092 like animal noises turned into talk.
  • 07.093 with figures of animals;
  • 07.093 for the convenience of the wonderful animals
  • 07.107 and a noise as of some great animal scuffling at the door.
  • 07.113 waited on by Beorn’s wonderful animals,
  • 07.136 but he loves his animals as his children.
  • 08.005 not animal eyes,
  • 12.011 of some vast animal snoring
  • 13.071 not even wild animals seemed to have used it

“animal, n.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 19 June 2016.

Cattle

Along with the “chattel”, this word ultimately comes from Latin capitale: goods, property, principal, as compared to interest.  I’m interested that the singular form, a cattle, has been used historically.  While in the 14th and 15th centuries the word referred to any livestock, its exclusively bovine connotation arose thereafter.

  • 07.023 and as a man he keeps cattle
  • 14.025 and cattle

“cattle, n.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 19 June 2016.

“chattel, n.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 19 June 2016.

Stomach

Is it a food word?  You be the judge!

  • 01.004 in the stomach;
  • 06.035 His stomach felt all empty
  • 06.046 and my stomach is wagging like an empty sack.’
  • 06.100 Soon Bilbo’s stomach was feeling full
  • 08.050 but to tighten the belts round their empty stomachs,
  • 08.076 in spite of an empty stomach,

Hare

Now I have learned something about the difference between hares and rabbits:

Newborn hares, called leverets, are fully developed at birth—furred with open eyes—while newborn rabbits, called kittens or kits, are born undeveloped, with closed eyes, no fur, and an inability to regulate their own temperature

Thanks, National Geographic!

  • 06.099 hares, and a small sheep.

Langley, Liz. “What’s the Difference Between Rabbits and Hares?” National Geographic. National Geographic Society, n.d. Web. 17 June 2016.

Famish

“Famish” is the surviving spin-off form of the verb “fame”, don’t get me started on “affamish”, the black sheep of this little word family.  All are, ultimately, from fames, Latin for “hunger”.

  • 06.096 in the meantime we are famished with hunger.’
  • 10.010 He had a famished
  • 10.027 and famished

“† affamish, v.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 17 June 2016.

“† fame, v.2.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 17 June 2016.

“famish, v.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2016. Web. 17 June 2016.

Sheep

Sometimes food, other times friends at Beorn’s house, always my favorite source of fiber.

  • 02.046 He took a big bite off a sheep’s leg he was roasting,
  • 06.095 for they would think we were after their sheep.
  • 06.099 hares, and a small sheep.
  • 07.093 in came some snow-white sheep
  • 12.072 and I have eaten his people like a wolf among sheep,