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Authors: John Bemelmans Marciano

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In a paper he presented in 1791, Galvani theorized that he had discovered a previously unknown electrical fluid produced in the brain that activated nerves and muscle. He called this force “animal electricity,” but the process came to be known as galvanism, a term coined by Galvani’s friend and intellectual rival, Alessandro Volta, who nevertheless disagreed with a key point of Galvani’s conclusions.

For the rest of the story, see
voltage.

ger·ry·man·der
v. To rezone voting districts to gain
electoral advantage.

Elbridge Gerry, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, offered his political credo at the Constitutional Convention of 1787. “The evils we experience flow from an excess of democracy. The people do not want virtue, but are dupes of pretended patriots.” As if to test the theory, in 1812 Governor Gerry signed into law a Massachusetts redistricting bill aimed at helping his Republican party pick up state senate seats, an intention made clear in the grotesque appearance of one particularly convoluted voting district.

The story usually goes that Gilbert Stuart (the artist who painted pretty much every portrait of George Washington you’ve ever seen) entered the offices of the
Columbian Centinel
, where a map of the infamous district was hanging. Stuart went up to it and scribbled a head, wings, and claws onto the oddly shaped district. “That will do for a salamander!” the artist said. “Gerrymander!” said the editor. The problem with this tale is that the drawing that made the rounds in Federalist newspapers was later discovered to have been drawn—with great care—by the lesser-known illustrator Elkanah Tisdale.

Whatever the truth, the editorial cartoon had its desired effect, and to prove that people aren’t total dupes (or at least back then weren’t), the citizens of Massachusetts voted Gerry out of office.

SUPERVILLAINOUS

From kryptonite to Clark Kent, the Superman comics have bequeathed much to our culture. Little known, however, are the lexical contributions made by a pair of the Man of Steel’s arch-enemies.

In the July 1958 issue of
Action Comics
(#242), writer Otto Binder introduced the evil intergalactic mastermind Brainiac. The villain shrank Metropolis and put it into a bottle, as he had done with other cities throughout the universe; Superman foiled his plan. With his lime-green skin, pink-and-white uniform, and short shorts, Brainiac was one of your less intimidating-looking supervillains. The word
brainiac
, an amalgam of
brain
and
maniac
, has entered the English language because, frankly, how could it not?

A few months after Brainiac debuted, another nemesis entered the picture in
Superboy
#58 (also written by the prolific Binder). Bizarro was the exact opposite of the last son of Krypton: His alter ego was Kent Clark, he belonged to the Injustice League, and his superpowers included freeze vision and X-ray hearing. He lived in Bizarro World, a square planet where life is the reverse of how it is on Earth. The word
bizarro
has come to mean an upside-down version of something or a creepy alternate reality, and was in part popularized by Superman überfan Jerry Seinfeld’s eponymously titled “The Bizarro Jerry” episode of his eponymously titled sitcom
Seinfeld
.

graham crack·er
n. A type of cracker that is like a biscuit
on its way to becoming a cookie.

Before South Beach, before Dr. Atkins, there was Graham.

The Graham diet is vegetarian but not vegan; it allows for moderate intakes of dairy products and eggs, but the menu leans heavily on fruits, vegetables, and fiber. The centerpiece of this diet is graham flour, a whole-grain product that is dark, unsifted, and coarsely ground. Although it sounds as if it could be the latest diet craze in America, the Graham diet was in fact the first. But unlike today’s dietary gurus, Sylvester Graham didn’t care if people lost weight; he just wanted to bring them closer to God.

A Presbyterian minister and self-styled “physiological reformer,” Graham created a dietary regimen that followed the ideals of the 1830s temperance movement and fought against what he saw as the evils of the Industrial Revolution. Graham railed against the dietary downside of consumer capitalism, denouncing chemical additives that millers put in flour to make it look more appealing. He promoted his whole wheat flour as a healthy alternative to a blanched product stripped of all its goodness, using it to create a digestive biscuit—the Graham cracker. Graham hoped his creation would help people avoid “stimulating” foods such as meat and spices, which he claimed produced gross amounts of lust in the body, and that his diet would in general lead to less sexual activity, which he was against in all but the most extenuating of circumstances.

Traveling the country to promote his ideas, Graham met with as much opposition as he did support. When he spoke butchers and bakers protested—so much so that he needed bodyguards to accompany him. While known derisively as Dr. Sawdust for his fibrous flour, Graham was revered among temperance types. Oberlin College mandated the adoption of his diet among students and faculty, even firing a professor who refused to stop bringing his own pepper shaker into the dining hall.

grog·gy
adj. Foggy in the brain, unsteady in the body.

TO CAPTAINS OF THE AQUADRON!

Whereas the Pernicious Custom of the Seamen drinking
their Allowance of Rum in Drams, and often at once, is
attended by many fatal Effects to their Morals as well as
their Health, the daily allowance of half a pint a man is to
be mixed with a quart of water, to be mixed in one Scuttled
Butt kept for that purpose.


order of Vice A
dmiral Edward Vernon, commander of the
British navy in the West Indies, August 12, 1740

At the time of the above edict, Edward “Old Grog” Vernon had just come off a career-making victory in the War of Jenkins’ Ear, during which he captured the Spanish possession of Portobello. Although this made him a hero back home, he was hardly Mr. Popular with the sailors under his command once he ordered their rum rations cut. Thankfully, the effect of the grog, as the tars called the diluted spirit in dishonor of their commander, was still sufficient to render the men into the state described in the above definition.

guil·lo·tine
n. A beheading apparatus.

In 1784 at Louis XVI’s invitation the physician Joseph-Ignace Guillotin joined the commission to investigate Franz Mesmer; five years and a revolution later, Dr. Guillotin was elected to a rather different body, the Revolutionary
Assemblée nationale constituante
, where he proposed a method of execution that he believed to be both more dignified and, with its speedy efficiency, more humane. His suggestion was adopted, with vigor.

gup·py
n 1. A species of fish native to the Caribbean,
often found swimming through plastic castles.

This enduringly popular aquarium fish was named after the amateur Trinidadian zoologist R. J. Lechmere Guppy, quite possibly the most famous amateur Trinidadian zoologist of all time.

guy
n. Am. slang: a way of referring to a male without
having to call him a man.

In the wee morning hours of November 5, 1605, Guy Fawkes was arrested in a rented storeroom under the House of Lords that was suspiciously packed with thirty-six barrels of gunpowder. Under torture, Guy confessed to being part of a Roman Catholic conspiracy to assassinate King James I, his family, and both houses of Parliament; he was hanged.

For over four hundred years, Guy Fawkes Day has been celebrated across the UK with fireworks and bonfires. On these crisp, late-autumn nights, children parade effigies of Fawkes through the streets chanting the nursery rhyme

Remember, remember the fifth of November,

the gunpowder treason and plot.

We see no reason why gunpowder treason

should ever be forgot!

Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes, t’was his intent

to blow up King and parliament.

Three score barrels were laid below

to prove old England’s overthrow.

By God’s mercy he was catch’d

with a darkened lantern and burning match.

So, holler boys, holler boys, let the bells ring.

Holler boys, holler boys, God save the King.

And what shall we do with him?

Burn him!

Upon reaching the great central bonfire, the kids toss “the guy” into the flames and then, if they are being traditional, follow it with an effigy of the pope.

Etymologically speaking, a
guy
came to mean someone of grotesque appearance, which came to include everyone, at least in America.

FIRST-NAME BASIS

Most first-name eponyms come from biblical characters, saints, or classical figures who are in general known only by a single name. In most other cases, words deriving from forenames are not eponyms but generic uses of common names—the more common the better—that tend to embody the everyman, or men, in the case of Tom, Dick, and Harry. True first-name eponyms are harder to come by, and even ones such as the above
guy
generally connote an average citizen, or one engaged in a profession, like the British bobby.

There are exceptions. A poindexter is a nerd, after the decidedly dorky cartoon character Poindexter (IQ: 222) of the
Felix the Cat
TV series. Yente Telebende was a loudmouthed busybody in Jacob Adler’s humorous essays about New York City’s Lower East Side; the Yiddish first name became a Yiddish eponym, which shortly entered English as
yenta
, meaning a gossip or meddler.

Pet names are often given to the tools of war, be they ships, swords, or guns. The word
gun
itself, in fact, comes from Gunhild, a female Scandinavian name. If that sounds odd, consider that the Germans called their World War I Belgium-bashing supercannon
die dicke
Bertha
—Fat Bertha—after Frau Bertha Krupp, owner of the armaments firm where they were manufactured. Our boys called them Big Berthas, and the Germans they were fighting, Jerry.

Bestowing a nickname upon the enemy is a common practice during wartime, from the Confederate Johnny Reb to the Viet Cong Charlie. An uglier but related practice are slurs such as mick for an Irishman, guido for an Italian, and nancy boy for an effeminate male.

Then there’s sex. Men tend to be on a first-name basis with their penises, hence the terms dick, willie, and peter; condoms are jimmy hats or, in Britain, johnnies, where instead of horny you get randy and hanker for a right rogering. The sex of animals can also be told in a name. You have tomcats, a jackass and a jenny, and goats are divided into billies and nannies, the latter being a nickname for Anne or Agnes and also used to refer to long-term babysitters.

America’s favorite name to represent the man on the street is Joe, be it Joe Blow, Joe Schmo, Joe Six-Pack, average Joe, or Joe the Plumber. Joe shows up in a number of other places, such as with sloppy joes and as a synonym for coffee, but the first name most pressed into lexical service— by a factor of absurdity—is my own.

As a noun used with the article
a, john
means the client of a prostitute; put
the
in front of it and you’re talking about a toilet. In the past it had other meanings, among them a male servant, a policeman (shortened from “johndarm,” as in
gendarme
), and a kind of plant. There is John Bull (the personification of England), John Barleycorn (the personification of liquor), John Q. Public, John Doe, the Dear John letter, and John Dory, a fish who for hundreds of years happily swam the seas as a dory before mysteriously acquiring a Christian name. You have Johnny-come-lately, Johnny-onthe-spot, and Johnny Crapaud (a Frenchman). Then there’s Jack. A jack once meant a rough character, which is why those guys on the playing cards look so dodgy, but a jack was also a laborer, as in lumberjack, jack o’lantern (a night watchman), and jack-of-all-trades. By extension, a machine that replaced a worker was called a jack, like the device we use to raise things, which became a verb used in expressions such as to jack up and to jack off. In nineteenth-century America, the name came to be used as a form of address to strangers, as in, “Who you lookin’ at, jack?” “You don’t know jack shit” is an Americanism of later vintage. The Scottish variant Jock might be behind
jockstrap
and is certainly the reason a racehorse rider is called a jockey. The John phenomenon affects English via foreign words as well. In Venice the nickname Zanni is equivalent to Johnny; in the commedia dell’arte it was a generic name for any of the comedic male roles, those guys who acted zany.

We could go on, to jerry-rig, to jimmy a lock, to Jim Dandy, but let’s ask ourselves instead—Jim, Jerry, Joe, John, Jack—how come all these names start with a J?

hook·er
n. Slang term for a prostitute; considered either
vulgar or polite, depending on the company you keep.

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