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Cabbage
09-28-1999, 07:31 PM
Anybody ever heard this story of the etymology of the word "quiz" before?

I don't remember the details of who and when (I'm sure it was 19th century or earlier), I think it happened in England. Anyway, it goes like this: This guy bet his friends he could invent a word that would be used by people within 24 hours. He went and scribbled the (at the time) nonsense word "quiz" all around town during the night. The next day, everyone was talking and wondering what "quiz" meant--hence the word, and the meaning of the word.

Is there any truth to this, or is it just another legend?

Mister_RogersAWC
09-28-1999, 07:33 PM
I checked this post thinking it was Palidork under a new name trying to prove his superiority. Looks like I was wrong. =)
Interesting urban legend, I can't wait to see the answer.

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"No job's too small, we bomb them all."
-Ace Wrecking Company

Pete
09-28-1999, 08:02 PM
My dictionary says it probably comes from latin "quis", meaning "what?"

Reminds me of a social studies teacher I had who loved giving us "quizzicals." What the hell is that, we'd ask. It's a little quiz.

"Oh yeah," I used to retort "then what would you call a little test?"

Okay, okay, the humor is juvenile, but I was 13.



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I don't know who first said "everyone's a critic," but I think it's a really stupid saying.

C K Dexter Haven
09-28-1999, 08:59 PM
Verrrrrry interestin'.

Eric Partridge, in Origins: A Short Etymological Dictionary of English says the probable origin is quis as in inquisitive or inquisition.

OTOH, Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable says that "The origin of the word, which appeared around 1870, is unknown; but fable accounts for it by saying that a Mr. Daly, manager of a Dublin theatre, laid a wager that he would introduce into the language within twenty-four hours a new word of no meaning. Accordinly on every wall, or all places accessible, were chalked up the four mystic letters, and all Dublin was inquiring what they meant. The wager was won and the word bedcame part of the language."

So I guess the jury is still out.

Markxxx
09-28-1999, 09:27 PM
Isn't quiz short for inquisition (Sp?)???

Kat
09-28-1999, 11:03 PM
From Dictionary of Word Origins, John Ayto:
No one has ever been able satisfactorily to explain the origins of quiz. A word of that form first appeared at the end of the 18th century, meaning 'odd person' or, as a verb, 'make fun of' (in the early 19th century it was claimed to have been coined by a Dublin theatre proprietor by the name of Daly, but no proof has ever been found for this). The verb later came to be used for 'look at mockingly or questioningly through a monocle' and it may be that this led on (perhaps helped by associations with inquisitive or Latin quis? 'who?, what?') to the sense 'interrogate'.

Since the original meaning of the word had nothing to do with tests or questions/questioning, even if the story is true, it wouldn't tie the origin into the current meaning.

C K Dexter Haven
09-29-1999, 08:31 AM
<< even if the story is true, it wouldn't tie the origin into the current meaning. >>

Well, the story goes that the word was scribbled all over the walls, etc. and so people asked, quizzically, "Hey, what's this mean?" and thus the meaning got attached to the word.

Sounds kinda far-fetched to me, but weirder things have happened.