Ahem, Matt:
The word "mug." It means so many things. Why does it mean a cup and a face and to get robbed? Where did that useful word come from?
-- Jeff, Escondido
Eight meanings, both nouns and verbs. And all come from one source: an old Scandinavian word meaning "drinking vessel." The word sat around meaning drinking vessel for a few hundred years until the British invented the Toby or character jug -- a drinking mug formed in the shape of a man's head with three-dimensional features. So, in the 1600s, "mug" took on the added meaning of "face." Because the jug faces were male, "mug" also came to mean an ordinary guy, or maybe a fool. By the mid-1800s, when cameras came in, "mugging" meant making a face. By the turn of the century, if you got punched in the face, you were "mugged." Can't wait to see what's next.
Ahem, Matt:
The word "mug." It means so many things. Why does it mean a cup and a face and to get robbed? Where did that useful word come from?
-- Jeff, Escondido
Eight meanings, both nouns and verbs. And all come from one source: an old Scandinavian word meaning "drinking vessel." The word sat around meaning drinking vessel for a few hundred years until the British invented the Toby or character jug -- a drinking mug formed in the shape of a man's head with three-dimensional features. So, in the 1600s, "mug" took on the added meaning of "face." Because the jug faces were male, "mug" also came to mean an ordinary guy, or maybe a fool. By the mid-1800s, when cameras came in, "mugging" meant making a face. By the turn of the century, if you got punched in the face, you were "mugged." Can't wait to see what's next.
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