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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on WORDMASTER: epic1 eponyms.
RS: An eponym, as dictionaries tell us, is a real or mythical2 person for whom something is or is believed to be named. For example, George Washington is the eponym of Washington, D.C.
AA: But you won't find obvious examples like that in a new book called "The Reverend Guppy's Aquarium3: From Joseph P. Frisbie to Roy Jacuzzi, How Everyday Items Were Named for Extraordinary People." From his brother-in-law's recording4 studio in London, author Philip Dodd explained to us how he got the idea.
PHILIP DODD: " I was watching a TV program a couple of summers ago here in the U.K. It's called 'University Challenge,' and there was a question along the lines of 'What tropical fish was named after a West Indian clergyman?' And nobody on the show knew -- and nor did I, come to that. And the answer came: it was the guppy.
"I looked to my left and we had a tropical aquarium at home full of guppies. and my then three-year-old daughter and I loved the guppies, these kind of cute little frilly tailed fish. I just had one of those little eureka moments where you think, 'I never, ever knew that.' And I never knew they were named after a person. And it just got me thinking and I started checking out things, and discovering that the Frisbee5 was named after somebody, and the Jacuzzi, and I started checking out their stories."
RS: "What kind of people did you find, or what new items in our lexicon6 did you find that were related to real people?"
PHILIP DODD: "I mean, it was things like the saxophone is named after Adolphe Sax. He was a Belgian musical instrument maker7 in the nineteenth century. He invented a lot of instruments and he named pretty well all of them something-sax, and it just happens that the one that stuck around is the saxophone.
"And then there'd be weird8 things like I just heard in passing the fact that the foxtrot dance was named after somebody called Harry9 Fox."
AA: "You thought maybe it was named after the animal or something?"
PHILIP DODD: "Could be -- you know, the funny thing, isn't it, when you use language every day, you don't stop and analyze10 every single word that comes out of your lips. And you gaily11 go around using these words like 'sandwich' and you don't sort of think, oh yeah, there was somebody called the Earl of Sandwich and that's where the name comes from."
RS: "So, you really in this book are telling us stories, stories behind the words."
PHILIP DODD: "Yes, stories about people, really, and how their name had been immortalized in the English language. Sometimes they didn't know about it. Joseph P. Frisbie, who the Frisbee is named after, he never knew that his name was going to be applied12 to this fantastic plastic flying disc."
AA: "Why, then, did it end up being called a Frisbee?"
PHILIP DODD: "He was a pie manufacturer in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and a very successful pie manufacturer in the beginning of the last century. He made fruit pies, primarily, that were famous in the area, and they came in these metal pie tins. And the delivery guys and people who just had one of his apple pies found that when the pie tins were empty and you kind of flicked13 them, they had an inbuilt aerodynamic quality that meant they just glided14. And locally this was known as Frisbie-ing.
"Joseph P. Frisbie died in nineteen-forty. Cut to nineteen fifty-seven, when the Wham-O toy company of California, working with a couple of inventors, were just about to market this new plastic flying disc -- which at the time was called the Pluto15 Platter. And they did a market research trip up in New England and they heard this word being used. People would say, 'Oh, I remember, that's like the Frisbie.' And they thought that's a great name for the product. In fact, Joseph P. Frisbie's name ended i-e and they changed it to double-e, which kind of suits the product better. It reminds me of the word 'whee,' and that sense of flying."
AA: "And tell us, where is Roy Jacuzzi?"
PHILIP DODD: "Roy Jacuzzi is in California, but strangely he was in England last week; I had breakfast with him. His son now lives just outside London. And Roy is from a great Italian family who came over from just north of Venice, through Ellis Island, in the nineteen hundreds. And they were like a bunch of brothers and sisters -- seven brothers and six sisters or the other way around -- and they were inventive guys who were always looking for practical solutions."
RS: And one of those solutions, it turned out, was the whirlpool bath. More about that story, and other eponyms, next week with Philip Dodd, author of "The Reverend Guppy's Aquarium."
AA: And that's WORDMASTER for this week. With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.
1 epic | |
n.史诗,叙事诗;adj.史诗般的,壮丽的 | |
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2 mythical | |
adj.神话的;虚构的;想像的 | |
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3 aquarium | |
n.水族馆,养鱼池,玻璃缸 | |
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4 recording | |
n.录音,记录 | |
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5 frisbee | |
n.飞盘(塑料玩具) | |
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6 lexicon | |
n.字典,专门词汇 | |
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7 maker | |
n.制造者,制造商 | |
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8 weird | |
adj.古怪的,离奇的;怪诞的,神秘而可怕的 | |
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9 harry | |
vt.掠夺,蹂躏,使苦恼 | |
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10 analyze | |
vt.分析,解析 (=analyse) | |
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11 gaily | |
adv.欢乐地,高兴地 | |
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12 applied | |
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用 | |
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13 flicked | |
(尤指用手指或手快速地)轻击( flick的过去式和过去分词 ); (用…)轻挥; (快速地)按开关; 向…笑了一下(或瞥了一眼等) | |
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14 glided | |
v.滑动( glide的过去式和过去分词 );掠过;(鸟或飞机 ) 滑翔 | |
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15 Pluto | |
n.冥王星 | |
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