“Taboo deformation is one possible way for a word to change its meaning,” says Andrew Byrd, a professor of...

“Taboo deformation is one possible way for a word to change its meaning,” says Andrew Byrd, a professor of linguistics at the University of Kentucky who specializes in Indo-European languages. Basically, we are scared of the true names of certain beings or concepts, because to use them might mean we summon them, which we don’t want, or anger them, which we definitely don’t want, or simply make other humans mad at us, which is slightly less bad but still not ideal. The true name is powerful, and we normal humans can’t handle that power. So we avoid using the true name, but sometimes we still need to communicate with each other about those beings or concepts. That means we have to figure out a way to talk about something without using the actual word for it.

Names do have power, just ask anyone who's mistakenly on the NoFly list or a branding manager. It's why we give our children and pets names with meaning (#Rufus, for example, meaning "Red Warrior"), why we name our vehicles (Ranger, Corvette, Titan or Tesla) or our swords (Excalibur). Even in the Biblical creation there was Nothing until the Abrahamic god said "Let there be light."

Words have power, even when those taboo deformations evolve from being a sly way of naming something without naming it into the newly accepted name for he who shall not be named.


https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/what-does-dagnabbit-mean

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