Almost every aspect of war spawns new words, and, over time, many of them slip into everyday use. Sometimes, they even become downright peaceful in the process. For instance,
triumph used to mean a victory ceremony for Roman conquerers, and
skedaddle signified retreat during the Civil War. And if you've ever had a
snafu ("Situation Normal: All F'ed Up"), then you owe a debt to the WWI soldiers who invented the acronym to describe the trenches. With each passing conflict, the list of pacified war words gets longer and longer.
undermine: If your colleagues constantly undermine you, just be glad they aren't doing so in the traditional sense.
Undermine, a word that dates back to the 14th century, was once a military term for digging a clandestine passage under a building to sneak up on the enemy. The term quickly turned metaphorical, but in Shakespeare's day, its literal meaning was still commonly known. He even playe with it in
All's Well That Ends Well , when the maiden Helena asks a soldier if there's a way to safeguard her virginity. He replies, "There is none: man, sitting down before you, will undermine you, and blow you up."
fleabag: Starting in the 1830s, a fleabag was a soldier's bed. Although the word
fleabag now seems wedded to
hotel, it can be applied more broadly, as in the 1958 example for the Oxford English Dictionary, "God, how I hated Paris! Paris was one big flea-bag."
basket case: Today, a basket case is simply a neurotic person, but during WWII, it meant a living soldier who had lost all his limbs and was brought home in a basket. The United States military denies that real baskets were ever used to carry soldiers. Regardless, the original meaning of the word is still gruesome.
(Image credit: Flickr user drakegoodman)
flak:Celebrities catch a lot of flak for idiotic behavior, but contemporary flak isn't what it used to be. When the term originated in the 1930s, it was short for
fliegerabwehrkanone, the German word for anti-aircraft guns. After a generation, the meaning shifted so that catching flak now means absorbing criticism instead of cannonfire.
gung ho: You may be gung ho about collecting stamps, playing solitaire, or other individual pursuits, but originally the term was more applicable to teams. The U.S. Marines first used it a as a slogan during World War II, after general Evans Carlson adapted the Chinese
kung ho, which means "work in harmony". While the teamwork element of the definition has faded, the enthusiasm bit has certainly remained.
fobbit, hillbilly armor, and IED: The war in Iraq is contributing its own expressions. A popular word on the rise is
fobbit, a term that combines FOB (forward operating base) with
hobbit. The word is a derogatory term for soldiers who stay too close to base and help themselves to three square meals a day. Another expression gaining steam is
hillbilly armor, a term for scraps used to bulletproof vehicles.
Some words have already entered civilian life.
IEDS, or improvised explosive devices, refer to the homemade bombs created by terrorists and insurgents. A recent GQ article about inappropriate office-party behavior uses it like this: "The workplace minefield is hard enough to negotiate without planting your own IEDs." So, what are the chances any of these new words will stick around? Who knows? The only thing that's certain is that as long as there are new wars, new words will crop up, too.
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How Violence Increases Our Vocabulary was written by Mark Peters. It is reprinted with permission from the Scatterbrained section of the
May/June 2008 issue of mental_floss magazine.
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