Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Stay a While and Learn About Sojourn
Stay a While and Learn About Sojourn Stay a While and Learn About ââ¬Å"Sojournâ⬠Stay a While and Learn About ââ¬Å"Sojournâ⬠By Mark Nichol After I posted a list of synonyms for trip, a couple of readers offered sojourn as an additional alternative. Unfortunately, however, they are victims of a common misunderstanding. Sojourn is actually a near antonym of trip. It means ââ¬Å"a brief stay.â⬠The confusion undoubtedly arises from the presence of the syllable journ, which is cognate with the first syllable of journey and journal (as well as the last element of du jour, French and restaurantese for ââ¬Å"of the dayâ⬠). What do all these words have in common? Jour is a descendant, through the Anglo-French word jur, of the Latin term diurnum, meaning ââ¬Å"day,â⬠which is also the source of diurnal (the opposite of nocturnal). Journey originally referred to a dayââ¬â¢s travel but now denotes travel of any significant duration. (Tour, though it rhymes with jour, is unrelated; it comes from the Latin word tornare, meaning ââ¬Å"to turn.â⬠) Journal, meanwhile, was originally a reference to a book used in church services. The meaning then shifted to any book for keeping personal or business records, and later also to daily publications. (The synonym for a personal journal, diary, is ultimately from dies, a Latin word for ââ¬Å"day.â⬠) Another related word is journeyman, which acquired the meaning ââ¬Å"a craftsman more skilled than an apprentice but not yet experienced enough to earn status as a master,â⬠came from the association of such workers with short-term projects they were (and sometimes still are) literally ââ¬Å"day men.â⬠So, where does sojourn come in? Perhaps the misunderstanding about its meaning stems from the connective grammatical function of the word so: ââ¬Å"I want to travel, ââ¬Ësoââ¬â¢ I ââ¬Ëjourn.ââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ However, it derives from subdiurnare, meaning ââ¬Å"part of a dayâ⬠(with the usual meaning of the prefix sub-) and referring to a resting period during a daylong journey. Therefore, Sojourner Truth, the nineteenth-century slave turned abolitionist and activist for womenââ¬â¢s rights, presumably selected that name for herself because she wished not to travel toward truth, but to abide in it. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Vocabulary category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:What Is Irony? (With Examples)The Parts of a WordThe Difference Between "Shade" and "Shadow"
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.