Why does ‘woman’ contain ‘man’ and ‘female’ contain ‘male’?

“Goodbye” used to be “godbye” (from an abbreviation for “God be with ye”), but people thought it was a greeting like “good morning” or “good day”, so they changed it to “goodbye”, even though “bye” has no meaning of its own.

This sort of thing is fairly common: speakers will incorrectly assume a word’s origin, and will sometimes make adjustments to words to fit those assumptions. This phenomenon is called “folk etymology”.

Another example of this is “woman”. In Old English, wer(man) (related to Latin vir) meant “man” and wif(man) meant “woman”, and man meant something like “person”. Wer survives in “werewolf” (literally “man-wolf”) and wif in “wife”.

Wifmen lost its “f” and became wimman, then “woman”; werman lost the “wer” and became man. Man retained its definition as “person” until the 20th century, when people assumed that it excluded women - understandably, since many men were using it in that way - so it’s fallen out of use for the most part.


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It has no connection to “womb-man”, either: in Old English, womb meant something more like “belly” or “abdomen”, so wombman, if it were a word, wouldn’t have had any obvious gender connections in Old English.

(“Human”, by the way, comes from the Latin humanus and has nothing to do with the word “man”.)

“Male” is from Latin masculus (“male”), which was then shortened to masle in Old French, and since French likes dropping S’s, became “male”. “Female” is also from French, but from femelle (“woman”), from the Latin diminutive of femina; it never had any etymological connection to “male”.


Sometimes the opposite can occur, where speakers fail to see a word’s origin and end up with etymological flotsam. “Cranberry” is an example of this: it comes from the Low German kraanbere, literally “crane-berry”. When English borrowed it, speakers correctly recognized that bere meant “berry”, but not that kraan meant “crane”, so they anglicized kraan to “cran” and ended up with “cranberry”, where “cran” doesn’t mean anything but is needed to make the word work.


This information was taken from Quora. Click here to view the original post.

Have you ever wondered why "female" and "woman" have such roots?

#Culture #language #Quora

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What are your thoughts on this subject?
38 Comments
Keith Scholl
I am Wifmen hear me roar
6
Feb 22, 2019 8:14PM
Axel Brosi
by(e) does have a meaning -- it's origin is Old Saxon and it means "to pass"
5
Mar 22, 2019 8:25AM
zolnem
Axel Brosi, also a unit measuring fresh herrings.
0
Sep 21, 2023 4:51PM
Allison Aspden
Interesting explanations.
0
Feb 26, 2023 5:24PM
Peter Thomas
Etymology is fascinating…
3
Jun 24, 2022 7:14PM
sandrafinch
I guess you could call it interesting, but to me it was just more dumb stuff.
3
Dec 28, 2019 8:01AM
John Bach-Hansen
But still . . . Bye Bye :-)
2
Nov 30, 2019 4:55PM
Ellen del Valle
I was confused as it said. Bye. Has no meaning if it’s own ?
0
Nov 14, 2019 11:48PM
pcnana
Axel Brosi, Glad to know I'm not the only one that knew bye was a real word.
1
Jun 23, 2019 5:01PM
Jorge Perez
ALGO INTERESANTE Y DE BUEN CONOCIMIENTO
0
Jun 6, 2019 5:01PM
Michael Johnston
I can see I am going to be a hit at the next party😎
1
Feb 6, 2019 6:32AM
Bob Pam Hanna
I find this all very interesting!! Good to know actually.
1
Jan 28, 2019 4:48PM
Eve
Love words and often look up the derivation myself. Thank you
2
Jan 16, 2019 10:43AM
William R. Meredith
Sacha Birnbaum Adams, the study of insex?
0
Jan 3, 2019 10:13AM
Laura Dice
Darlene Hanson, well what do you think? What's wrong with this explanation???
1
Dec 31, 2018 5:13PM

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