|
A dwarf or small boy; an insignificant or contemptible person. When the Irish novelist Maria Edgeworth wrote a letter to a friend in April 1795, she commented on her recent reading, “It is a scarce and very ingenious book; some of the phraseology is so much out of the present fashion, that it would make you smile: such as the synonym for a little man, a Dandiprat.” She was somewhat premature: the word survives to be included in at least a few modern one-volume dictionaries because it does turn up from time to time in historical or fantasy fiction. In evidence of this, I place before you a quotation from Forward the Mage by Eric Flint and Richard Roach of 2002: Who is so wise as to distinguish, with unerring precision, between a little man, a dwarf, a gnome, a midget, a shrimp, a runt, a pygmy, a Lilliputian, a chit, a fingerling, a pigwidgeon, a mite, a dandiprat, a micromorph, an homunculus, a dapperling, a small fry or someone with bad posture, weighted down with the cares of the world? though this perhaps proves no more than that Messrs Flint and Roach possess a thesaurus with historical pretensions. Nobody has the slightest idea where the word comes from. It first appears in the language in the early sixteenth century in the sense of a small coin current at the time, curiously worth 1½ pence, but then quickly develops its other senses. SHARE THIS ARTICLE |
Page created 30 Aug 2008
News
This site has been nominated for the Lsoft Choice Awards. Please visit the awards site and vote for World Wide Words.
Visit our companion site, Affixes, describing the building blocks of English: 1,250 entries plus 10,000 examples.
Most visited pages
Random selections
|