Friday, November 22, 2019
Hanging Words
Hanging Words  Hanging Words  Hanging Words                                      By Maeve Maddox                                            	  The Latin verb pendere, ââ¬Å"to hang,â⬠ has fostered numerous words that have something to do with the act of hanging.  In English, many ââ¬Å"hangingâ⬠ words have come and gone, but plenty remain in contemporary usage. The most immediately recognizable are pendant, pendent, pendulous, pendulum, pend, and pending.  pendant  The noun pendant refers to a loosely hanging piece of jewelry worn on a chain around the neck.   A pendant can also be the hanging part of an earring. ââ¬Å"Pendant lampsâ⬠ are designed to hang from the ceiling.  An obsolete meaning of pendantin the plural-is testicles:   They gird themselves with a piece of raw leather, and fasten a square piece like the back of a glove, to it, which almost hangs so low as their pendants. (1634 example from the OED, spelling modernized)  pendent  The adjective pendent means hanging or suspended. Something that is hanging is said to be pendent. For example, on old documents like the Magna Carta, a seal is pendent from the parchment. In grammar, an incomplete grammatical structure, such as a dangling participle, is said to be pendent.  pendulous  Like pendent, the adjective pendulous means ââ¬Å"hanging,â⬠ but with the added connotation of drooping or sagging. The word is often applied to jowls; for example, bloodhounds and basset hounds have pendulous jowls.   pendulum  The pendulum of a clock is a rod with a weight at one end, used to regulate and control the movements of the clock mechanism. It hangs and swings back and forth.  pend/pending  The verb pend is probably not used as often as its present participle form pending. ââ¬Å"To pendâ⬠ means ââ¬Å"to await conclusion or resolution.â⬠ Thatââ¬â¢s to say that a matter is hanging in uncertainty. As an adjective, pending is used to mean ââ¬Å"awaiting decision.â⬠ As a preposition, pending means ââ¬Å"while awaiting, during, or until,â⬠ as in, ââ¬Å"Court of Appeal stays appeal proceedings pending outcome of central amendment applications to the EPO.â⬠  In the Roman economy, money was weighed in a scale that had hanging parts. I suppose that explains the fact that the Latin verb pendere, ââ¬Å"to hang,â⬠ had the related meaning ââ¬Å"to weigh.â⬠ For this reason, some English ââ¬Å"hanging wordsâ⬠ have a figurative sense of weighing something, for example, the English word compendium. A compendium is ââ¬Å"an abridgement or condensation of a larger work or treatise, giving the sense and substance, within smaller compass.â⬠   Compendium is from the Latin verb compendere, ââ¬Å"to weigh together.â⬠ A compendium, in both Latin and in English, is the abridgement of a longer work in which the ââ¬Å"heavierâ⬠ part has been kept and the ââ¬Å"lighterâ⬠ part dispensed with. Dispense is another hanging word, from Latin pensare, ââ¬Å"to weigh out.â⬠) The association of weighing with money transactions can also be seen in some of these words.  Without further comment, Iââ¬â¢ll leave you with a few more words and let you discern the ââ¬Å"hangingâ⬠ connection in them.  append  appendage  appendix  depend  dependent  dependable  dependence  expend  expenditure  impend  independent  perpendicular  suspend  suspense  suspender                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Vocabulary category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:50 Idioms About Legs, Feet, and ToesHow to Punctuate with ââ¬Å"Howeverâ⬠Show, Don't Tell    
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