net – podictionary 1059

Feb 19th, 2010 | podcasts

Once upon a time my mother was knitting a style of sweater that had many open holes in the weave. My father looked at it and said “no wonder it’s going so fast, it’s mostly air.”

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That’s the thing about nets too, they’re mostly air; but it’s what’s around the air that does the job.

I was looking at the web based dictionary wordnik and one of the features they have is a little graphic representing frequency of a word’s appearance over time. It’s interesting that their plot for the word net falls off during the 1920s to 1950s and then pops back up again in the 1990s.

netIt seems obvious to me that the frequency of the word net over the past decade would have increased as an abbreviation for the word internet.

I wonder what made the word less frequent after 1950; perhaps more grocery store shopping and less small-scale fishing? I don’t picture small-scale fishermen as being terribly prolific writers who’d have bulked up the word-stock before that.

If you have any ideas let me know.

Of course it could be that the wordnik stats feature has a kink in it.

Clearly the internet is so called because it is full of links between nodes, just like other networks; streets, train tracks, groups of friends.

All of these networks are so called because a real net is strands linking knots.

But it turns out that a real net is called a net not because of the strands but because of the knots.

I mentioned knitting and nodes as well as net and knot and all of these words go back to a knotty origin. They have a granular kind of Old English taste to them don’t they?

3 Comments »

Comment by Suzanne

February 24, 2010 @ 2:03 pm

The consolidation of the fishing industry over the last couple of generations has meant the loss of many fishing communities as well as many fishing jobs. There were probably many more writers living in or near or coming from fishing communities back when there were more fishing communities.

Comment by Lee Conway

March 22, 2010 @ 12:04 am

A little late – have only just listened to the “net” episode. The word may have become less frequent after the 1950s for a couple of reasons other than those to do with fishing. My theory (or 2 bits worth): The downturn in dressmaking at home as well as the disappearance of full skirts made of tulle or net for special occasions such as weddings would account for at least some of the word’s demise. As well, the disappearance in the early 60s of the totally tulle or net “stiff petticoat” from the wardrobes of nearly every woman and girl in the western world must have reduced the number of references to “net” in women’s magazines, sewing patterns, and perhaps even in Mills and Boon romances. Also, “net”, at least here in Australia, prior to the 1960s was used frequently because every bed and particularly every baby cot or pram had a mosquito net. As well, every milk jug had a beaded net cover and every household had two or three net cloths to throw over food in order to guard against flies. With the advent of efficient fly screens and, of course, air conditioning nets became obsolete. And then, of course, there were the ubiquitous net curtains of suburban Britain. They, too, have all but disappeared and with them millions of opportunities to use “net” in cliches referring either to the street busybody peeping out from behind “twitching net curtains” or the the lower-middle class parvenu being looked down upon by the middle classes for having nets ‘grace’ their front windows.

Comment by Lee Conway

March 24, 2010 @ 1:15 am

…And another thing…hair nets. Before the advent of hairspray in the 60s, these nets were used, often by older women, both day and night. By day they held hairstyles in place, albeit rather horribly viz “Coronation Street’s” Eena Sharples and by night they held curlers in place, equally unattractively. Given that most western women over the age of 40 would have owned at least one of these nets, then “hair net” would have had the potential to generate incredible numbers of written references.
It was the hairspray that done them in!

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