TIL the word "apron" comes from the Old French word "napron." Over time "a napron" became "an apron."
TIL the word "apron" comes from the Old French word "napron." Over time "a napron" became "an apron."
10 comments
orange is the same: "a norange -> an orange", hence "una naranja" in Spanish.
14 0 ReplyRebracketing is the standard linguistics term for this phenomenon, in case anyone's curious.
13 0 ReplySimilar thing with "a nickname", which came from "an ekename".
11 0 ReplySo nickname is a nickname for an ekename, gotcha.
3 0 Replyan a.k.a name
4 1 Reply
Check out the YouTube channel "Rob Words", as he covered this. It was news to me too!
6 0 ReplySimilar: 'Nuncle' came from 'mine uncle'.
6 1 ReplyI'm getting Tumblr folk etymology vibes from this.
4 0 ReplyNope.
It comes from the French 'oncle', from the Latin 'avunculus'.
1 0 Reply
So should we short it down to pron?
4 0 Reply
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