Ait

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Dr. Goodword
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Ait

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sun Dec 10, 2017 11:21 pm

• ait •

Pronunciation: ayt • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: 1. An islet, an isle, a small island, usually in a river. 2. (Scottish) An oat.
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Notes: The second sense of today's word is probably just the Scottish pronunciation of oat, but the first meaning may be surprising. First, it is sometimes spelled eyot, as the eyots of the River Thames. This word was combined with land early on to make sure everyone understood it to be land surrounded by water. The result, eitland, today is island.

In Play: River islands come with a touch of romance, maybe engendered by the works of Mark Twain: "Riding north from Harrisburg along the Susquehanna, I am constantly reminded by the aits in that river of Tom Sawyer's life as a boy on the Mississippi." Do be careful buying one, however; living on one might not be all that romantic. "When Phil bought a plot of land in Florida for his retirement, he didn't realize that it was an ait in the Okefenokee Swamp."

Word History: Today's Good Word comes from Old English igeth, which was eit by Middle English. The Old English word is a reduction of Proto-Indo-European akw- "water", the same root that became aqua "water" in Latin. We see the Latin word in many English borrowings, like the word for the color of Mediterranean water, aqua, and others, including aquarium, aquaduct, and the water of life, aquavit. Latin had a verb from this root, too, aquari "to fetch water". The past participle of this verb was aquatus, inherited by Italian as guazzo, which French borrowed for the water-color painting known as gouache. To drain the water away in Late Latin was exaquare, from ex "away (from) + aqua "water". Old French smoothed this word off a bit, creating esseouer (essorer "to wring out" today). At this point English worked its magic to reduce this word to sewer. (Dawn Dresser is a pleasant ait amidst the river of Good Words for having suggested today's surprisingly lovely wordlet.)
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tapoensgen
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Re: Ait

Postby tapoensgen » Mon Dec 11, 2017 12:43 pm

An ait on the River Thames is often also called an eyot. There are a few idyllic ones in the Thames near where I live, in the London Borough of Chiswick.

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Slava
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Re: Ait

Postby Slava » Mon Dec 11, 2017 2:11 pm

Well, this is rather interesting. Ait comes from a root that meant water. So how the heck did it come to mean land? Wild.

My spellcheck doesn't like the word, by the way. I've had to add it. I guess the compilers don't use crossword puzzle dictionaries.
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