Mother

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Dr. Goodword
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Mother

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sat May 13, 2017 11:17 pm

• mother •

Pronunciation: mê-dhêr • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: The female parent, a woman who bears and/or primarily raises a child.

Notes: Mother, the word, has borne a large and happy family of derivational offspring. The adjective and adverb of this noun are both motherly, which has a noun, motherliness, that expresses the affection and nurturing of good mothers. The status of being a mother is, of course, motherhood, as 'a woman who enjoys motherhood'. The new term for "baby talk" is motherese since we discovered that it is an affectation of mothers and not childish speech. Just as mothers often must handle two jobs, so does today's Good Word, which doubles as a verb. "She mothers him too much," means that she is too attentive to his needs.

In Play: Mothers are the central part of our lives and often of other things as well: the central part of a computer is the motherboard and Mother Earth and Mother Nature completely enfold us. The mother of all sales would be the biggest imaginable sale and the one imitated by all others. Our mothers are the critical part of our lives and of things that are bigger than life; they are the creators of life.

Word History: It is most appropriate that the word for "mother" in Proto-Indo-European originated in the first recognizable syllable uttered by babies: ma. This syllable was attached to a kinship suffix, -ter, which also turns up in brother, father, and sister. The original form, mater-, later evolved into the current words for "mother" that we now find in all the Indo-European languages: Latin mater, Greek meter (as in metropolis, the mother city), German Mutter, French mère, Serbian majka, Russian mat', materi, Italian and Spanish madre, Portuguese mãe, Danish moder, Dutch and Afrikaans moeder, Norwegian and Swedish mor, Icelandic móðir, Irish máthair, Hindi mataji, Gujarati maataa, Farsi (Persian) madar, and Pashto (Afghanistan) mor. If you are a mother, may this day be as beautiful and exciting as your name in all these languages.
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Perry Lassiter
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Re: Mother

Postby Perry Lassiter » Mon May 15, 2017 12:36 am

Re the "mother of alk sales" etc. i played with the idea of wondering whether "the father of all sales" might be even bigger, as men are usually larger than the female of the species. Immediately , my mind rejected it. Just saying the phrase "father of" in my head suggests at once the origin or source. "The father of our country" has no reference to size, but to a founder. Something to ponder...
pl

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Re: Mother

Postby David Myer » Mon May 15, 2017 8:04 am

Interesting, Perry. Am I right in thinking that Mother of all... meaning really big, is a relatively new invention. It certainly wasn't a concept we used when I were a lad in England. I guess it is American and recent - post internet. So it should be possible to search for a first use. I don't think I am up to that.

But it does raise the thought that most nations see their country as a mother. Germany talks about the fatherland. But is it so that everyone else calls theirs the mother country? And why do we need to allocate a gender to such a thing?

Weird.

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Re: Mother

Postby Perry Lassiter » Tue May 16, 2017 11:41 pm

The first time I remember hearing the expression was from Saddam Hussein about the first gulf war. He promised it would be the mother of all wars. Turned out to be a mere skirmish that reminded me of the Israeli wars.
pl

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call_copse
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Re: Mother

Postby call_copse » Wed May 17, 2017 6:55 am

Indeed Wiktionary lists 'mother of all...' as a calque from Arabic, first coined by Saddam.
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