No Chuckling I've Just Invented the Chortle: a New Book Reveals The
Like 3.4m Follow @MailOnline Friday, Feb 5th 2016 10AM 26°C 1PM 27°C 5Day Forecast Home News U.S. Sport TV&Showbiz Australia Femail Health Science Money Video Travel Fashion Finder Latest Headlines News World News Arts Headlines Pictures Most read News Board Wires Login YOU MIGHT LIKE Sponsored Links by Taboola 10 Things Men Find Unattractive MillennialLifestyle.com Building Your Website? Try One of These Site Builders Top 10 Best Website Builders The Best Animal Photos of the Year Visboo Educational Posts The Ultimate Way to Get Cheap Hotel Rooms Save70 15 Most INSANE Pictures Of The Amazon TravelTips4Life OMG These 15 Plastic Surgery Pictures Will SHOCK You FitTips4Life No chuckling I've just invented the chortle: Site Web Enter your search A new book reveals the bizarre origins of our wackiest words By PAUL DICKSON PUBLISHED: 01:12 GMT, 26 June 2014 | UPDATED: 06:37 GMT, 26 June 2014 56 View comments The English language has given us some wonderful words and phrases — such as gremlins and flibbertigibbets. But where did they come from? In his fascinating new book, Paul Dickson reveals all — and here are some of the best . Beastly innuendo Making the ‘beast with two backs’ is a metaphor Like Follow coined by Shakespeare to describe the love Daily Mail @dailymailuk making between Othello and his bride Desdemona. Follow +1 Daily Mail Daily Mail Shakespeare was a great minter of new words. He gave us 229, including bedazzle, archvillain, fashionable, inauspicious, vulnerable, DON'T MISS sanctimonious, bump, hurry and outbreak. Another of the Bard’s words, which deserves to Hilary BUFF! Star slips into a striped bikini as be used more, is ‘smilet’ — a halfsmile of she reunites with ex amusement.
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