GENBRIT-L Archives
Archiver > GENBRIT > 2004-01 > 1073760936
From: "W Johnson" <>
Subject: Re: Nephew double meaning
Date: Sat, 10 Jan 2004 18:55:36 -0000
References: <Z%CLb.429$ir1.2691@newsfep4-glfd.server.ntli.net> <58euvv8in0aob0772p8n9fpfrfsv8dgnmv@4ax.com> <fqkvvvc2698i99l7t4groqud8fr3nbroi1@4ax.com> <ijrvvvcm81irjmd7famuo1sco3tnhobpu9@4ax.com>
"Don Aitken" <> wrote in message
news:...
snipped
> >Is this feasible? If nephew could be used for grandson then I assume
> >niece could be used for grandaughter. But would "cousin" be used for
> >great niece?
>
> I think both may be possible. Certainly both terms were once used in a
> loose sense to refer to relatives. The problem is that I don't know of
> any convenient source that helps much with dates for this kind of
> thing. The OED records the *first* use of different meanings of words,
> but makes no attempt to record when the various senses went out of use
> - indeed it is difficult to imagine how that could reliably be done.
snipped
> --
> Don Aitken
According to the Shorter OED, examples of the following have been found:
1. nephew was used meaning niece up to 1585.
2. nephew was used meaning grandson up to 1699.
3. nephew was used meaning any descendant up to 1676.
4. niece was used meaning a grand-daughter or more remote female descendant
up to c.1600.
5. a niece was used meaning any(i.e. not necessarily a descendant of oneself
or a sibling) female relative up to 1508.
Will
This thread:
| Re: Nephew double meaning by "W Johnson" <> |