Can't find origin of the word "Wow" in order to explain it to a non-English speaker "why we say that". Unlike the word "oof " and the like, it does not seem to be an onomatopoeia, at least I am not sure I would on my own come up with such an expulsion of air by being amazed at something.
The best I can seem to find is that it is from a "Scottish interjection from the 16th century", but that does not really explain how a Scot would come up with it.
Origin of the word "Wow"
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Origin of the word "Wow"
Known in restaurant circles by quasi-Thai moniker, "That Guy" (e.g. heard in the back.."that guy is here again"; "that guy on/at table 10"; "that guy is going for a sirloin again", etc.)
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Half the distance in half the states...from half2run.com
It seems you found just about all there is to know.
Sir Walter Scot used it: " Wow, woman, the Bertrams of Ellangowan are the auld Dingawaies lang syne. There is a sang about ane o' them marrying a daughter of the King of Man . . . ."
(Guy Mannering)
Robert Burns used it
"But Maggie stood, right sair astonish'd,
Till, by the heel and hand admonish'd,
She ventur'd forward on the light;
And, wow! Tam saw an unco sight!"
(Tam O'Shanter)
Lewis Carroll used it
"They cam' to me," said that fair ladye.
"Wow, they were flimsie things!"
(The Lang Coortin')
These uses all seem to be in some dialect or another.
As to why or how? Your guess is as good as anyone's wild conjecture.
Sir Walter Scot used it: " Wow, woman, the Bertrams of Ellangowan are the auld Dingawaies lang syne. There is a sang about ane o' them marrying a daughter of the King of Man . . . ."
(Guy Mannering)
Robert Burns used it
"But Maggie stood, right sair astonish'd,
Till, by the heel and hand admonish'd,
She ventur'd forward on the light;
And, wow! Tam saw an unco sight!"
(Tam O'Shanter)
Lewis Carroll used it
"They cam' to me," said that fair ladye.
"Wow, they were flimsie things!"
(The Lang Coortin')
These uses all seem to be in some dialect or another.
As to why or how? Your guess is as good as anyone's wild conjecture.
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Re: Origin of the word "Wow"
I find that when I say this word I'm breathing in more than out. At least a tissue held in front of my face doesn't move unless I pronounce it as if it began with an "h." So, this leads me to think it may actually be somewhat onomatopoeic. Maybe it's the way someone decided a sudden intake of breath sounded....I am not sure I would on my own come up with such an expulsion of air by being amazed at something.
bnjtokyo: for a lark I looked up flang. It turns out to be a real word in and of itself. It's a miner's two-headed pick.
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From the Online Etimology Dictionary:
wow 1510s, Scottish interjection, a natural expression of amazement. The verb meaning "overwhelm with delight or amazement" is first recorded 1924, Amer.Eng. slang. Used as a noun meaning "unqualified success" since 1920. "This old interjection had a new popularity in the early 1900s and again during the 1960s and later" [DAS].
Regards//Larry
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"To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them."
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Can there be a discussion of Wow, without referencing Kate Bush's song of that name?
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Welcome sStevenson, and please keep posting! A number of first or second posts have popped up in the last few months, only to disappear as mysteriously as new particles in an accelerator. And all contributed something! BTW, do those early English quotes sound remarkably like Alice in Wonderland to you? Twas brillig and all that...
pl
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Well, sStevenson, what is a word? Aren't interjections a "word class"? Does not "wow" have a different meaning than "ugh" or "oops"? Is it not arbitrary? (That is, unlike laughter, which is a behavior all humans exhibit, the sound sequence [waʊ] does not occur in all languages nor does it, in those languages in which it does appear, always express the same meaning it does in English.
Turning now to "table," it too is arbitrary, and its meaning is entirely dependent on a social contract among speakers of English. According to the etymological dictionary linked to this site, it is
from O.Fr. table "board, plank, writing table, picture" (11c.), and late O.E. tabele, from W.Gmc. *tabal (cf. O.H.G. zabel, Ger. Tafel), both from L. tabula "a board, plank, table," originally "small flat slab or piece" usually for inscriptions or for games, of uncertain origin, related to Umbrian tafle "on the board."
and what happened before that is lost in the mists of time. Or did Kipling include an explanation in the "Just So Stories"?
Turning now to "table," it too is arbitrary, and its meaning is entirely dependent on a social contract among speakers of English. According to the etymological dictionary linked to this site, it is
from O.Fr. table "board, plank, writing table, picture" (11c.), and late O.E. tabele, from W.Gmc. *tabal (cf. O.H.G. zabel, Ger. Tafel), both from L. tabula "a board, plank, table," originally "small flat slab or piece" usually for inscriptions or for games, of uncertain origin, related to Umbrian tafle "on the board."
and what happened before that is lost in the mists of time. Or did Kipling include an explanation in the "Just So Stories"?
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