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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!bu.edu!dartvax!mars.caps.maine.edu!maine.maine.edu!io20816
- From: IO20816@MAINE.MAINE.EDU (Kevin Foss)
- Newsgroups: alt.mythology
- Subject: Re: where do the months come
- Message-ID: <92324.221237IO20816@MAINE.MAINE.EDU>
- Date: 20 Nov 92 03:12:37 GMT
- References: <1992Nov19.3064.1543@dosgate>
- Distribution: alt
- Organization: University of Maine System
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <1992Nov19.3064.1543@dosgate>, david.meadows@canrem.com (david
- meadows) says:
- >
- >JK4In article <92319.173218IO20816#MAINE.MAINE.EDU> IO20816@MAINE.MAINE.EDU
- >(Kevin Foss) writes:
- >
- >JK4 And May supposedely comes from the the Latin maior, meaning greater,
- > 4 and the month was dedicated to Jupiter, (deus maius - greater god).
- >
- >JK4Sounds odd, both linguistically and otherwise. "Maius" is just the
- > 4irregular nominative form of the word; the more regular forms have
- > 4the stem maiore-. And Jupiter was not called "greater god" but
- > 4"greatest god", i.e. superlative attributes like maximus, optimus,
- > 4etc. were used. The usual explanation is that May (Maius) was the
- > 4month dedicated to the goddess Maia. (The Latin month names are
- > 4actually adjectives, with the implicit noun being mens 'month'.
- > 4So May is "Maius (mens)" in Latin, and the -us ending is the normal
- > 4masculine ending required by the gender of the word "mens".)
- >
- >This one is definitely correct ... the month, according to ancient
- >authors, was named for the daughter of Vulcan, Maia by name and has
- >nothing to do with Jupiter.
-
- Well the moral of this story, is that Shipley's "Dictionary of Word Origins"
- isn't too reliable (or in this case at least). Thanks to both of you for
- the corrections.
-
- -Kevin
- --
- Kevin A. Foss EMail:1) io20816@maine.maine.edu
- 2) kevin_foss@macact.umeres.maine.edu
- --
-