I stopped at the service station today and noticed they had a sign saying "car wash/
carr fholcadh". Is that wrong in several ways, or has my brain stopped working? I would interpret "carr f
holcadh" as a car you take a bath in!
I was also intrigued by the phrase
gan luaidhe because like English, Irish uses the same word for the element lead and the "lead" (actually graphite) that's in a pencil. I'd used luaidhe in both contexts, but I'd never thought about that before. That got me wondering whether the mistake was inherited from English, or whether both English and Irish inherited it from another source. So the I wondered how old pencils are, and how the lead/graphite mix-up occurred. I still don't know the answer to the etymology question, but here's some interesting info.
Wikipedia wrote:
Some time before 1565 (some sources say as early as 1500), an enormous deposit of graphite was discovered on the approach to Grey Knotts from the hamlet of Seathwaite in Borrowdale parish, Cumbria, England.[4][5][6][7] The locals found that it was very useful for marking sheep. This particular deposit of graphite was extremely pure and solid, and it could easily be sawn into sticks. This remains the only large scale deposit of graphite ever found in this solid form.[8] Chemistry was in its infancy and the substance was thought to be a form of lead. Consequently, it was called plumbago (Latin for "lead ore").[9][10] The black core of pencils is still referred to as lead, even though it never contained the element lead. The words for pencil in German (Bleistift), Irish (Peann Luaidhe), Arabic (قلم رصاص qalam raṣāṣ), and other languages literally mean lead pen.
I found that interesting because I would have assumed that the stuff in pencils was called "lead" by someone who didn't know how they were manufactured. It never ocurred to me that the people making the first pencils thought they were actually using lead. One would think they would notice that this "lead" was surprisingly light.
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