glass – podictionary 1051

Feb 15th, 2010 | podcasts

Glass is an example of a word that has shattered into lots of meanings we currently recognize but also with many earlier and forgotten etymological branches.

SPONSOR: GotoMeeting Hold your meetings online for just $49/mo. Try GoToMeeting FREE for 30 days

In English the word shows up well over 1100 years ago in the works attributed to King Alfred the Great.

Then, as now, the word meant the substance glass.

Since people make lots of useful things out of glass these too began adopt the word as their name:

  • windows,
  • drinking vessels,
  • bottles,
  • hourglasses,
  • telescopes,
  • spectacles,
  • mirrors,
  • barometers,
  • magnifying glasses, and
  • microscopes

have all at some time in the last 600 years or so been called a glass.

Today, apart from the material itself, spectacles and drinking vessels are the things that come to mind when someone refers to their glasses without which they can’t find their glass.

The word glass arrived with the oldest of Old English, because the manufacture of glass is one of the oldest of technologies.

According to John Ayto’s book Word Origins, glass manufacture historically produced colored glass, not clear glass, and so ghel, the Indo-European ancestor of glass, was actually a color word that also gave Greek a word meaning “green” and English the word yellow.

The American Heritage Dictionary assigns this same Indo-European root ghel the meaning “to shine,” and so associates the root with the word gold.

Glass is sometimes said to be a super-cooled fluid as opposed to a solid.

The reason people say this is that unlike many minerals glass isn’t formed into crystals but made up of its constituent molecules all jumbled together at random as they would be in a liquid.

This is what makes glass so useful because unlike H2O which turns from ice to water all in a rush, glass just becomes oozier and oozier as it warms up and thus can be formed into all the useful objects that people want to refer to as a glass.

This too is why the windows in ancient buildings are made up of panes that are thin at the top and thicker at the bottom. Over the centuries they too have oozed; just very, very slowly.

5 Comments »

Comment by J P Maher

February 15, 2010 @ 9:57 am

Glass bead making began in early Sumer, spread to dynastic Egypt, then to Rome and China, where the art went far beyond the manufacture of glass beads, a trade good like wampum and shells. Egyptian faience beads are found in Bronze Age Scandinavian graves, Baltic amber in Egyptian burials. Man-made glass is similar in molecular structure and in feel to natural amber. Both will have their uses in modern electrical technolgogy. ELEKTRON is Greek for amber. The Germanic word GLAS, before the arrival of Roman glass goods to the north, meant ‘amber’, this word being from medieval Arabic.

Comment by Adrian Morgan

February 15, 2010 @ 11:03 pm

I can’t be bothered looking up sources now (it’s something I learned when the Internet was young), but the thing about glass in ancient windows slowly oozing and becoming thicker at the bottom is a myth.

Pingback by podictionary weekly » podictionary weekly # 244 – February 15 to 19

February 19, 2010 @ 1:04 am

[...] podictionary word was glass Tuesday’s word history was for harlot Wednesday’s word origin was for brick Thursday’s [...]

Comment by KMortis

March 8, 2010 @ 5:43 pm

Like the poster above said, glass as a fluid is a myth. Phillip Gibbs explains it well. http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/Glass/glass.html

Comment by Nigel

May 28, 2010 @ 8:39 pm

Adrian is correct. The assertion that glass continues to flow over time at room temperature is an urban legend. the reason that some old stained glass windows are found to be thicker at the bottom had to do with the manufacturing process. It was extremely difficult to make panes of glass even. There have also been stained glass windows that were thicker at the top.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>