User:Alleged editor/sandbox
Appearance
List of people associated with dissemination of words[edit]
Person | Born | Died | Birthplace | Personal details | Word | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Henry Huxley | May 4, 1825 | June 29, 1895 | Ealing | English biologist and anthropologist known as "Darwin's Bulldog" | abiogenesis | 1870 | Coinage |
Julius Caesar | July 12, 100 BC | March 15, 44 BC | Rome | Ancient Roman general and statesman who served as Consul and Dictator | Latin casus ablativus (ablative case) | Unknown | Coinage[1] |
Johann Peter Zwengel | Unknown | circa 1576 | Holy Roman Empire | German civil servant | German Ablaut (ablaut) | 1568 | Coinage |
Marcellin Berthelot | October 25, 1827 | March 18, 1907 | Paris | French chemist | French acétylène (acetylene) | 1860 | Coinage |
Philip Verheyen | April 23, 1648 | January 28, 1710 | Verrebroek, Dutch Republic (modern-day Belgium) | Flemish anatomist | Modern Latin chorda Achillis (Achilles tendon, lit. Achilles' sinew) | 1693 | Coinage |
Lorenz Heister | September 19, 1683 | April 18, 1758 | Frankfurt | German surgeon | Modern Latin tendo Achillis (Achilles tendon) | 1717 | Coinage |
Pierre Marie | September 9, 1853 | April 13, 1940 | Paris | French neurologist | French acromégalie (acromegaly) | 1885 | The word is said in contemporary literature to have been coined by Marie. |
Andrea Verga | May 20, 1811 | November 21, 1895 | Treviglio | Italian psychiatrist and neurologist | acrophobia | 1887 | Coinage[2] |
Albrecht Kossel | September 16, 1853 | July 5, 1927 | Rostock | German biochemist | adenine | 1885 | Coinage |
Takamine Jōkichi (高峰 譲吉) | 1854 | July 22, 1922 | Takaoka (高岡) | Japanese chemist | adrenalin | 1901 | Coinage |
Flavius Sosipater Charisius | Unknown | Unknown | Roman empire | Ancient Roman grammarian who flourished 4th century AD, probably an African by birth, summoned to Constantinople to take the place of Euanthius, a learned commentator on Terence | Latin adverbium (adverb) | circa 360 | Charisius coined the word as a translation of Greek ἐπίρρημα (epirrhema)[3] |
Louis Pasteur | December 27, 1822 | September 28, 1895 | Dole, Jura | French biologist | French aérobie (aerobe) | 1863 | Coinage[4] |
Kenneth H. Cooper | March 4, 1931 | (living) | Oklahoma City | American physician | aerobics | 1968 | Coinage |
Robert N. Butler | January 21, 1927 | July 4, 2010 | New York City | American gerontologist | ageism | 1969 | Coinage |
Thomas Henry Huxley | May 4, 1825 | June 29, 1895 | Ealing | English biologist and anthropologist known as "Darwin's Bulldog" | agnostic | 1869 | Coinage |
Carl Friedrich Otto Westphal | March 23, 1833 | January 27, 1890 | Berlin | German psychiatrist | German Agoraphobie (agoraphobia) | 1871 | Coinage |
Napoleon | August 15, 1769 | May 5, 1821 | Ajaccio | French statesman and military leader who served as the head of French government | French la perfide Albion (perfidious Albion) | 1813 | Popularization[5][6] |
Magnus Huss | October 22, 1807 | April 22, 1890 | Sweden | Swedish professor of medicine | Modern Latin alcoholismus (alcoholism) | 1852 | Coinage |
Justus von Liebig | May 12, 1803 | April 18, 1873 | Darmstadt | German chemist | aldehyde | 1835 | Coinage[7] |
Albert von Schrenck-Notzing | May 18, 1862 | February 12, 1929 | Oldenburg (city) | German physician, psychiatrist and notable psychical researcher | German algolagnie (algolagnia) | 1892 | Coinage |
Paracelsus | 1493/1494 | September 24, 1541 | Switzerland | Swiss alchemist | alkahest | circa 1527 | Coinage |
Clemens von Pirquet | May 12, 1874 | February 28, 1929 | Austria | Austrian scientist | German Allergie (allergy) | 1906 | Coinage |
Auguste Comte | January 19, 1798 | September 5, 1857 | Montpellier | French philosopher | French altruisme (altruism) | 1830 | Coinage or popularization |
Humphry Davy | December 17, 1778 | May 29, 1829 | Penzance | Cornish chemist | aluminum | 1812 | Coinage |
John Milton | December 9, 1608 | November 8, 1674 | Cheapside | English poet | amaranthine | 1667 | Milton apparently coined this word[8] |
Eugen Bleuler | April 30, 1857 | July 15, 1939 | Zollikon | Swiss psychiatrist | German Ambivalenz (ambivalence) | 1910 | Coinage |
Kimball Young | October 26, 1893 | September 1, 1972 | Provo, Utah | American sociologist | ambivert | 1927 | Young coined the word in Source Book for Social Psychology |
James Truslow Adams | October 18, 1878 | May 18, 1949 | Brooklyn | American writer and historian | American dream | 1931 | Adams coined this term in his 1931 book The Epic of America |
John Witherspoon | February 5, 1723 | November 15, 1794 | Gifford | Scottish-American Presbyterian minister | Americanism | 1781 | Coinage[9] |
John Wesley Powell | March 24, 1834 | September 23, 1902 | Mount Morris, New York | American scientific researcher and civil servant | Amerind | 1899 | Coinage[10] |
Torbern Bergman | March 20, 1735 | July 8, 1784 | Sweden | Swedish chemist | Scientific Latin ammonia (ammonia) | 1782 | Coinage[11] |
Robert Louis Stevenson | November 13, 1850 | December 3, 1894 | Edinburgh | Scottish writer | amoral | 1882 | Stevenson apparently coined this word[12] |
Louis Pasteur | December 27, 1822 | September 28, 1895 | Dole, Jura | French biologist | French anaérobie (anaerobe) | 1863 | Coinage |
Otto Jespersen | July 16, 1860 | April 30, 1943 | Randers | Danish linguist | anaphoric | 1914 | Coinage[13] |
Gunnar Täckholm | February 2, 1891 | January 24, 1933 | Stockholm | Swedish botanist | aneuploid | 1922 | Coinage |
Paul Hermann | June 30, 1646 | January 29, 1695 | Halle (Saale) | German botanist | Modern Latin Angiospermae (angiosperm) | 1690 | Coinage |
Walter William Skeat | November 21, 1835 | October 6, 1912 | London | English philologist | Anglo-French | 1887 | The word was popularized, if not coined, by Skeat |
Théodule-Armand Ribot | December 18, 1839 | December 9, 1916 | Guingamp | French psychologist | French anhédonie (anhedonia) | 1896 | Ribot coined this word as an opposite to analgesia |
Carl Julius Fritzsche | October 17, 1808 | June 8, 1871 | Neustadt in Sachsen | German chemist | aniline | 1841 | Coinage |
August Wilhelm von Hofmann | April 8, 1818 | May 5, 1892 | Giessen | German chemist | aniline | 1840s | Hofmann adopted this word |
Georg Ernst Stahl | October 22, 1659 | May 24, 1734 | Ansbach | German chemist, physician and philosopher | animism | circa 1720 | Stahl coined this word based on the concept of the anima mundi |
Edward Burnett Taylor | October 2, 1832 | January 2, 1917 | Camberwell | English anthropologist | animism | 1866 | Taylor reintroduced this word |
Edward Burnett Taylor | October 2, 1832 | January 2, 1917 | Camberwell | English anthropologist | animism | 1871 | Taylor defined this word as the "theory of the universal animation of nature" |
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck | August 1, 1744 | December 18, 1829 | Bazentin | French naturalist | Modern Latin Annelida (annelid) | 1801 | Coinage |
William Whewell | May 24, 1794 | March 6, 1866 | Lancashire | English scientist | anode | 1834 | Whewell proposed this word |
Michael Faraday | September 22, 1791 | July 11, 1845 | Newington Butts | English scientist | anode | 1834 | Faraday published this word[14] |
Johann Wilhelm Meigen | May 3, 1764 | August 25, 1867 | Solingen | German entomologist | Modern Latin Anopheles (Anopheles) | 1818 | Coinage |
William Gull | December 31, 1816 | January 29, 1890 | Colchester | English physician | anorexia nervosa | 1873 | Coinage |
William Gull | December 31, 1816 | January 29, 1890 | Colchester | English physician | apepsia hysterica | 1868 | Gull also offered as an alternative apepsia hysterica as a name for anorexia nervosa |
Thomas Browne | October 19, 1605 | October 19, 1682 | London | English polymath | antediluvian | 1646 | Coinage |
Francis Galton | February 16, 1822 | January 17, 1911 | Birmingham | English tropical explorer, geographer, and meteorologist | anticyclone | 1863 | Coinage[15] |
Emil von Behring | March 15, 1854 | March 31, 1917 | Hansdorf, Kreis Rosenberg, Province of Prussia, Kingdom of Prussia, German Confederation (now Ławice, Iława County, Poland) | German physiologist | antitoxin | 1890 | Coinage |
Charles John Smith | April 13, 1819[16] | November 29, 1872[16] | England | English clergyman | antonym | 1867 | Smith perhaps introduced the word to English in his 1867 book Synonyms and Antonyms |
Johannes Kepler | December 27, 1571 | November 15, 1630 | Weil der Stadt | German astronomer | aphelion | 1596[17] | Coinage |
Carl Linnaeus | May 23, 1707 | January 10, 1778 | Råshult | Swedish botanist | aphis | 1758 | Coinage |
John Henry Newman | February 21, 1801 | August 11, 1890 | City of London | English theologian | apologia | 1864 | The word apologia was popularized by Newman's Apologia Pro Vita Sua[18] |
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz | July 1, 1646 | November 14, 1716 | Leipzig | German polymath | German Apperzeption (apperception) | Unknown | Coinage |
Heymann Steinthal | May 16, 1823 | March 14, 1899 | Gröbzig | German philologist and philosopher | German apraxie (apraxia) | 1871 | Coinage[19] |
James Dwight Dana | February 12, 1813 | April 14, 1895 | Utica, New York | American geologist | Archaean | 1872 | Coinage[20] |
Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer | September 3, 1801 | April 2, 1869 | Frankfurt | German palaeontologist | Modern Latin Archaeopteryx (archaeopteryx) | 1861 | Coinage |
Karl Theodor Ernst von Siebold | February 16, 1804 | April 7, 1885 | Würzburg | German zoologist | Modern Latin Arthropoda (Arthropoda) | 1845 | Coinage |
Max Müller | December 6, 1823 | October 28, 1900 | Dessau | German-British philologist | Aryan | 1859 | Müller popularized this word in his writings on comparative linguistics, recommending it as the name (replacing Indo-European, Indo-Germanic, Caucasian, Japhetic) for the group of related, inflected languages connected with these peoples, mostly found in Europe but also including Sanskrit and Persian.[21] |
Heinrich Dreser | October 1, 1860 | December 21, 1924 | Darmstadt | German chemist | German Aspirin (aspirin) | 1899 | Dreser coined this word as a trademark |
William Herschel | November 15, 1738 | August 25, 1822 | Hanover | German-born British astronomer | asteroid | 1802 | Herschel probably coined this word |
William Whewell | May 24, 1794 | March 6, 1866 | Lancashire | English scientist | astigmatism | 1849 | Coinage |
Robert S. Dietz | September 14, 1914 | May 19, 1995 | Westfield, New Jersey | American scientist | astrobleme | 1961 | Coinage[22] |
Joseph Henri Honoré Boex | February 17, 1856 | February 11, 1940 | Brussels | Belgo-French author | French astronautique (astronautic) | 1927 | Coinage |
Antoine Nicolas Duchesne | October 7, 1747 | February 18, 1827 | Versailles, Yvelines | French botanist | French atavisme (atavism) | by 1820s | Coinage |
Felix Jacob Marchand | October 22, 1846 | February 4, 1928 | Halle (Saale) | German Pathologist | German atherosklerose (atherosclerosis) | 1904 | Coinage[23] |
William A. Hammond | August 28, 1828 | January 5, 1900 | Annapolis, Maryland | American military physician and neurologist | athetosis | 1871 | Coinage |
Charles Darwin | February 12, 1809 | April 19, 1882 | The Mount, Shrewsbury | English naturalist, geologist and biologist | atoll | Unknown | Popularization |
Æthelthryth | circa 636 | June 23, 679 | Exning | East Anglian princess, Fenland and Northumbrian queen and Abbess of Ely | Audrey | Unknown | Her reputation popularized this feminine proper name |
Edward Delavan Perry | December 20, 1854 | March 28, 1938 | Troy, New York | American classical philologist | atopy | 1923 | Coinage |
Pierre Gassendi | January 22, 1592 | October 24, 1655 | Champtercier | French astronomer | aurora borealis | 1621 | Coinage |
Raymond Dart | February 4, 1893 | November 22, 1988 | Brisbane | Australian anthropologist | Australopithecus | 1925 | Coinage[24] |
Eugen Bleuler | April 30, 1857 | July 15, 1939 | Zollikon | Swiss psychiatrist | German Autismus (autism) | 1912 | Coinage |
Havelock Ellis | February 2, 1859 | July 8, 1939 | Croydon | English physician, eugenicist, writer, progressive intellectual and social reformer who studied human sexuality | auto-erotic | 1898 | Coinage |
Delmar Sherille Harder | March 19, 1892[25] | September 21, 1973[25] | New York[25] | American businessman who once served as vice president of Ford Motor Company | automation | 1948 | Coinage[26] |
Thomas Harrison Montgomery Jr. | March 5, 1873 | March 19, 1912 | New York City | American zoologist | autosome | 1906 | Coinage |
Guillaume Joseph Gabriel de La Landelle | March 5, 1812 | January 19, 1886 | Montpellier | French aviation pioneer | French aviation (aviation) | 1863 | Guillaume Joseph Gabriel de La Landelle coined this word in his Aviation ou Navigation aérienne |
Carl Linnaeus | May 23, 1707 | January 10, 1778 | Råshult | Swedish botanist | azalea | 1735[27] | Coinage |
Frédéric Chopin | March 1, 1810 | October 17, 1849 | Żelazowa Wola | Polish composer and virtuoso pianist | ballade | Unknown | The word was popularized in the 19th century as a type of musical composition by Chopin[28] |
Jack Conway | 1888 | October 2, 1928 | New York | American author who worked for Variety | baloney | 1922 | The word is sometimes said to have been coined by Conway |
Al Smith | December 30, 1873 | October 4, 1944 | New York City | American politician who served four terms as Governor of New York and was the Democratic Party's candidate for president in 1928. | baloney | 1930s | Popularization[29] |
Lewis Carroll | January 27, 1832 | January 14, 1898 | Daresbury | English writer | bandersnatch | 1871 | Carroll coined this word in "Jabberwocky" |
Liberace | May 16, 1919 | February 4, 1987 | West Allis, Wisconsin | American pianist | cry all the way to the bank | 1956 | Liberace coined the term after a Madison Square Garden concert that was panned by critics but packed with patrons |
Saint Barbara | mid 3rd century | late 3rd century to early 4th century | Heliopolis Phoenicia, Roman Empire (present-day Baalbek, Lebanon) | Ancient Roman Chritian saint and martyr | Barbara | Unknown | The word was popularized as a Christian name by the legend of Saint Barbara, whose cult flourished from the 7th century |
Adolf von Baeyer | October 31, 1835 | August 20, 1917 | Berlin | German chemist | German Barbitursäure (barbituric acid) | 1863 | Coinage[30] |
Humphry Davy | December 17, 1778 | May 29, 1829 | Penzance | Cornish chemist | Modern Latin barium (barium) | 1808 | Coinage |
Robert Boyle | January 25, 1627 | December 31, 1691 | Lismore Castle, Lismore, County Waterford, Kingdom of Ireland (in personal union with England and Scotland under Charles I of England) | Anglo-Irish natural philosopher, chemist, physicist, and inventor | barometer | Unknown | The name was probably coined (and certainly popularized) by Boyle[31] |
Antoine Lavoisier | August 26, 1743 | May 8, 1794 | Paris | French chemist | barytes | Unknown | Coinage |
Eduard Suess | August 20, 1831 | April 26, 1914 | London, England, United Kingdom | Austrian geologist born to Adolph Heinrich Suess (1797-1862), a Lutheran merchant born in Saxony, Holy Roman Empire and Eleonore Friederike Zdekauer, a Jewish woman born in Prague, , nowadays part of the Czech Republic, which once belonged to the Holy Roman Empire and the Austrian Empire (German Confederation) | German batholith (batholith) | 1892 | Coinage |
Auguste Piccard | January 28, 1884 | March 24, 1962 | Basel | Swiss physicist, inventor and explorer | bathyscaphe | 1947 | Coinage |
Herb Caen | April 3, 1916 | February 1, 1997 | Sacramento, California | American humorist and journalist | beatnik | 1958 | Coinage |
John B. Watson | January 9, 1878 | September 25, 1958 | Travelers Rest, South Carolina | American psychologist | behaviorism | 1913 | Coinage |
Thomas Jefferson | April 13, 1743 | July 4, 1826 | Shadwell, Virginia | American statesman who served as the 3rd president of the United States from March 4, 1801 to March 4, 1809 | belittle | 1781 | The word is first recorded in writings of Thomas Jefferson and probably coined by him[32] |
Ernst Haeckel | February 16, 1834 | August 9, 1919 | Potsdam | German biologist | benthos | 1891 | Coinage |
Eilhard Mitscherlich | January 7, 1794 | August 28, 1863 | Wilhelmshaven | German chemist | German benzin (benzene) | 1833 | Coinage |
Horace Walpole | September 24, 1717 | March 2, 1797 | London | English writer, art historian, man of letters, antiquarian and Whig politician | betweenity | 1760 | The word, not recognized by Merriam-Webster, is a jocular formation and perhaps coined by Walpole[33] |
H. L. Mencken | September 12, 1880 | January 29, 1956 | Baltimore | American journalist, essayist, satirist, cultural critic, and scholar of American English | Bible belt | 1924 | The term is likely coined by Mencken |
William Hyde Wollaston | August 6, 1766 | December 22, 1828 | Dereham | English chemist | bicarbonate | 1814 | Wollaston apparently coined this word[34] |
Jack Conway | 1888 | October 2, 1928 | New York | American author who worked for Variety | bimbo | 1920s | The word is said to have been popularized by Conway |
Van Rensselaer Potter | August 27, 1911 | September 6, 2001 | South Dakota | American biochemist | bioethics | 1970 | Coinage |
Gardner Murphy | July 8, 1895 | March 18, 1979 | Chillicothe, Ohio | American psychologist | biofeedback | 1969 | The word is said to have been coined by Murphy[35] |
Elliott Coues | September 9, 1842 | December 25, 1899 | Portsmouth, New Hampshire | American army surgeon and ornithologist | biogen | 1882 | Coinage[36] |
Thomas Henry Huxley | May 4, 1825 | June 29, 1895 | Ealing | English biologist and anthropologist known as "Darwin's Bulldog" | biogenesis | 1870 | Coinage |
Frederic Clements | September 16, 1874 | July 26, 1945 | Lincoln, Nebraska | American plant ecologist | biome | 1916 | Clements probably coined this term |
William Whewell | May 24, 1794 | March 6, 1866 | Lancashire | English scientist | biometry | 1831 | Coinage[37] |
Thomas Scott Lambert | May 22, 1819 | March 21, 1897 | Wakefield, Massachusetts | American physican | biometry | 1860s | Popularization |
Patrick Geddes | October 2, 1854 | April 17, 1932 | Ballater | Scottish biologist | bionomics[38] | 1888 | Coinage[39] |
Ernest Besnier | April 21, 1831 | May 15, 1909 | Honfleur | French dermatologist | French biopsie (biopsy) | 1895 | Coinage |
Eduard Suess | August 20, 1831 | April 26, 1914 | London, England, United Kingdom | Austrian geologist born to Adolph Heinrich Suess (1797-1862), a Lutheran merchant born in Saxony, Holy Roman Empire and Eleonore Friederike Zdekauer, a Jewish woman born in Prague, , nowadays part of the Czech Republic, which once belonged to the Holy Roman Empire and the Austrian Empire (German Confederation) | German Biosphäre (biosphere) | 1875 | Coinage |
John Tukey | June 16, 1915 | July 26, 2000 | New Bedford, Massachusetts | American mathematician | bit | 1948 | Coinage |
William James | January 11, 1842 | August 26, 1910 | New York City | American philosopher and psychologist | bitch goddess | 1906 | Coinage[40] |
Edmund Spenser | 1552/1553 | January 13, 1599 | London | English poet | blatant | 1596 | The word was coined 1596 by Edmund Spenser in "The Faerie Queen," in blatant beast, a thousand-tongued monster representing slander[41] |
Westbrook Pegler | August 2, 1894 | June 24, 1969 | Minneapolis | American journalist and writer | bleeding heart | 1930s | This word is said by many to have been popularized with reference to liberals (especially Eleanor Roosevelt) in 1930s by Pegler[42] |
Eleanor Roosevelt | October 11, 1884 | November 7, 1962 | New York City | American political figure, diplomat and activist, serving as the First Lady of the United States during her husband President Franklin D. Roosevelt's terms | bleeding heart | 1930s | This word is said by many to have been popularized with reference to liberals (especially Eleanor Roosevelt) in 1930s by Pegler[42] |
Frank Munsey | August 21, 1854 | December 22, 1925 | Mercer, Maine | American newspaper and magazine publisher and author | blurb | 1906 | The word, according to Publishers' Weekly, was invented by Munsey. The word was originally used to mock excessive praise printed on book jackets and probably derisively imitative[43] |
Gelett Burgess | January 30, 1866 | September 18, 1951 | Mercer, Maine | American humorist | blurb | 1907 | Popularization[43] |
Robert J. Roberts | 1849 | December 22, 1920 | England, United Kingdom | Body-builder born in England, coming to the United States when young and serving as superintendent of the Boston YMCA gymnasium | body building | Perhaps 1881 | Coinage |
Henri Murger | March 27, 1822 | January 28, 1861 | Paris | French novelist and poet | bohemian | late 1840s | The word was popularized by Henri Murger's stories from the late 1840s later collected as Scenes de la Vie de Boheme[44] |
H. L. Mencken | September 12, 1880 | January 29, 1956 | Baltimore | American journalist, essayist, satirist, cultural critic, and scholar of American English | booboisie | 1922 | Mencken seems to have coined this word[45] |
References[edit]
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- ^ Harper, Douglas. "adverb (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "aerobic (adj.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ "la perfide Albion?". WordReference. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
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- ^ "Acetaldehyde". Chemistry World. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "amaranthine (adj.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "Americanism (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "Amerind (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "ammonia (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
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- ^ Harper, Douglas. "anaphoric (adj.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ "The Etymology and Meaning of Anode and Cathode". Thiebes. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "anticyclone (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ a b "Erith". Kent Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Wilson, Curtis. "Aphelion". Springer. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "apologia (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "apraxia (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "Archaean (adj.)". Etymonline. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
{{cite web}}
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value (help) - ^ Harper, Douglas. "Aryan". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "astrobleme (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "atherosclerosis (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "Australopithecus (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ a b c "Delmar Sherille Harder". Find A Grave. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ "Automation Essentials: 12 Questions and Answers About Automation". integromat. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Andrews, Charles. "What is an Azalea?" (PDF).
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "ballade (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "baloney (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ "Origin of the name of barbituric acid". Chemistry Stackexchange. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "barometer (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "belittle (v.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "betweenity (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "bicarbonate (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "biofeedback (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "biogen (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Stigler, Stephen (September 2000). "The Problematic Unity of Biometrics". Biometrics. 56 (3): 653. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "bionomics (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ "VERTIGO AND ACROPHOBIA : SIMILAR BUT NOT SAME". BEYONDWORDS. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Tréguer, Pascal. "ORIGIN OF THE PHRASE 'THE BITCH GODDESS' (MATERIAL SUCCESS)". word histories. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "blatant (adj.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ a b Harper, Douglas. "bleeding heart (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ a b Harper, Douglas. "blurb (n.)". Etymonline. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ Harper, Douglas. "bohemian". Etymonline. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
{{cite web}}
: Check|archiveurl=
value (help) - ^ "Booboisie". Merriam-Webster. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.