Mindblown: a blog about philosophy.
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Alliaceous
In botany, the Latin word allium refers to a genus of plants that includes garlic, onions, and leeks. Alliaceous—pronounced alley ay shus—is the adjective formed from this Latin word and it can be applied to anything, including food or breath, that smells of garlic or onions. In the Middle Ages in southern Europe, food tended…
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All nations
This eighteenth-century drinking term referred to the insalubrious potion that servants in public drinking houses concocted by emptying their patrons’ unfinished beverages into a single large vessel. Drinking the resulting mixture of wine, beer, spirits, and phlegm after the patrons had left for the night was one of the perks of being a public-house servant.…
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Ale
The word ale, which emerged in English more than a thousand years ago, might be distantly related to aluminum: both words possibly derive from the Indo-European alu, meaning bitter. Bitterness pertains to ale because it’s a bitter beverage, especially in comparison with another ancient drink, mead, which is made from honey. Bitterness pertains to aluminum…
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Alcarraza
When an athlete exercises, she sweats so that the droplets of salty water on her skin will carry away heat as they evaporate. The same principle cools water in the Arabic vessel known as the alcarraza, a pitcher made of porous earthenware: while suspended in a shady, draughty location, a small amount of the water…
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Al dente
A dentist looks after teeth; a trident is an ancient weapon with three teeth; you indent a paragraph when you take a “bite” out of the first line; and al dente means that you have cooked pasta or vegetables so that they are tender but still firm “to the tooth.” English borrowed this Italian phrase…
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Agape
An agape was a frugal meal that the early Christians ate together to symbolize their ideals of charity and sharing, and to commemorate the last supper of Jesus and his disciples. Appropriately enough, agape, usually pronounced to rhyme with bag a pay, is a Greek word meaning love. It did not take long, however, for…
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Adam’s ale
In Eden, the only ale that Adam had or wanted was water, so Adam’s ale became, in the seventeenth century, a humorous name for drinking-water; in Scotland the term Adam’s wine is used. Adam’s name appears also in Adam’s apple, a phrase bestowed upon both the human larynx and upon the sour fruit better known…
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Acetabulum
In the New Testament, the Gospel of John recounts how Jesus, just before he died, cried out, “I am thirsty,” causing one of the spectators, perhaps a Roman soldier, to dip a sponge into a nearby jar of vinegar-water, which he then held to Jesus’s mouth. To us, the soldier’s offer of vinegar may seem…
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Abominable things
There are many things that you might not want to eat, but in the Old Testament there is also a list of “abominable things” you are forbidden to eat. Deuteronomy, chapter fourteen, says that you may eat animals that chew the cud and also have a cloven hoof; however, you may not eat animals that…
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Abligurition
When Francois Mitterand, the former president of France, realized that he would soon die of prostate cancer, he engaged in a stupendous act of abligurition; that is, he squandered a small fortune on a lavish and bizarre meal for himself and thirty friends. The meal included oysters, foie gras, and caviar, but the piece-de-resistance was…
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