Random Thought of the Day

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Biker Joe

Über Member
People who are described as "ruthless"; what is this "ruth" they lack?

Similarly for "gormless" people; what exactly is "gorm"?

I won't bother with "feckless" as it will lead to multiple Fr. Jack Hackett postings.
According to merriam-webster.com, "gormless" does indeed mean "lacking in gorm", which was originally the middle-English word "gaum" or "gome", meaning "understanding, or attention".
“Ruth” was a common word in Middle English, first appearing (as “reuthe”) around the 12th century, meaning “pity or compassion,” and in the 13th century we spoke of a person who was kind, charitable, and just generally felt your pain as being “ruthful.”
Feckless. 1590s, from feck, "effect, value, vigor" (late 15c.), Scottish shortened form of effect (n.), + -less. Popularized by Carlyle, who left its opposite, feckful, in dialectal obscurity. Related: Fecklessly; fecklessness.
 

classic33

Leg End Member
[QUOTE 5270161, member: 259"]That is a truly wonderful word and I'm going to start using it management reports forthwith :becool: (or should that be "going forward"?). :whistle:[/QUOTE]
From this moment on, or fromnowon.
 

postman

Squire
Location
,Leeds
I really do like Vantage's new avatar,it would look good on a t shirt,i might just go down to Otley and see if they can copy it,if that is legal.
 

ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
People who are described as "ruthless"; what is this "ruth" they lack?

Similarly for "gormless" people; what exactly is "gorm"?
There was a sketch on Candid Camera about 50 years ago based on that! A foreign-sounding man walked up to people asking them where to get 'gorm'. "I must have gorm! My beauuuuu-tiful girlfriend, she finish with me because she say I so gormless. Where I buy gorm?", that kind of thing.
 
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