prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
Theme week! Collective nouns for animals. Which could fill whole semesters, but I'm picking words not otherwise used for other things.


cete - n., a company of badgers.


Or so the American Heritage Dictionary puts it. Possibly from Medieval Latin cetus, assembly, from Latin coetus, a coming together, variant of coitus. Nature is such the perv sometimes.

---L.

collective

Date: 2006-03-06 04:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flw.livejournal.com
I love collective nouns. "Murder" of crows. "Rafter" of turkeys. I always wonder about the origins. Some of them seem made up.

Re: collective

Date: 2006-03-07 02:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] prettygoodword.livejournal.com
I think he means consciously made up in their present form, as opposed to borrowed or inherited.

---L.

Date: 2006-03-06 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] movingfinger.livejournal.com
I suspect this is the same as the more usual "set" or "sett"?

Date: 2006-03-07 12:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] prettygoodword.livejournal.com
Except that a sett is the burrow of a badger, not a group of them.

The OED classifies that sett with set n1, the action of setting and its derivatives (as opposed to set n2, senses of being a collection). And that sense of sett doesn't appear till the late 19th century, well after cete. (Other meanings of sett: a squared paving stone, esp. of granite; each of the squares in the pattern a tartan; the adjustment of the reeds of a loom necessary for the making of a fabric of a particular texture, and the make of fabric the gives; and a tool or device used for setting, eps. a heavy punch or chisel for use on metal or stone -- whee!).

---L.

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