Friday, 28 May 2010

Etymological Dictionary


http://www.etymonline.com/index.php

This is a map of the wheel-ruts of modern English. Etymologies are not definitions; they're explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago. The dates beside a word indicate the earliest year for which there is a surviving written record of that word (in English, unless otherwise indicated). This should be taken as approximate, especially before about 1700, since a word may have been used in conversation for hundreds of years before it turns up in a manuscript that has had the good fortune to survive the centuries. The basic sources of this work are Weekley's "An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English," Klein's "A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language," "Oxford English Dictionary" (second edition), "Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology," Holthauzen's "Etymologisches Wörterbuch der Englischen Sprache," Ayto's "20th Century Words," and Chapman's "Dictionary of American Slang." A full list of sources used in this compilation can be found here. Since this dictionary went up, it has benefited from the suggestions of dozens of people I have never met, from around the world. Tremendous thanks and appreciation to all of you.

Bubble Car // neo-nomad.net



This is a Bubble car (a post WW2 production)! It immediately reminded me of the Cushicle by Archigram… (1966) and the Suitsalon (1967) (BTW, isn’t Orta’s Refuge Wear City Interventions 1993-1998 in the lineage of the Suitsalon? and Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, 1972, so related to Archigram? I like hypertexting :) This is to say that I am quite impressed by Archigram’s sensibility toward their post WW2 everyday, and their subsequent mental assemblages.

posted by Yasmine Abbas in his blog 'neo-nomad'. Yasmine is a French DPLG architect, holds a Master of Science in Architecture Studies (SMArchS 2001) from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Doctor of Design (DDes 2006) from Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

http://blog.neo-nomad.net/

ARCHIGRAM



The phenomenon that is Archigram (from ARCHItecture and teleGRAM) changed the world of architecture in the sixties and seventies and has influenced many world class, and less famous, architects - and architecture generally - ever since. Indeed the group's ideas have grown even more relevant as time passes. 1991 saw the reissue of the book that they put together in 1972, and the Archigram exhibition has been touring the world since 1994. (Citation by David Rock - Past President RIBA )

http://www.archigram.net/

http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/people/showcase/01-02/archigram.htm

http://www.graniph.com/artist/Archigram.html

www.esadse.fr/postdiplome/Azimuts/pdf/34__az34_archigram.pdf