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description= Spanish has two words for malaria, one of them being malaria itself, which English shares. That noun originated in Italian, and if translated directly into Spanish it would have come out *malaire, which is to say bad air. People once thought that bad air caused the disease. The other Spanish word for malaria is paludismo,…;
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paludismo and malaria spanish english word connections spanish english word connections vínculos entre el español y el inglés home about this blog glossary the author who this blog is for paludismo and malaria 30 may 2019 4 comments by steve schwartzman in uncategorized tags english language etymology latin language spanish language vocabulary words spanish has two words for malaria one of them being malaria itself which english shares that noun originated in italian and if translated directly into spanish it would have come out malaire which is to say bad air people once thought that bad air caused the disease the other spanish word for malaria is paludismo which english once shared in the form paludism this term was based on latin palus with stem palud which meant marsh swamp and is the source of the uncommon spanish noun palude that means lagoon pond pool the connection of course is that malaria spreading mosquitos thrive in places with still fresh water from the same latin word english but apparently not spanish has paludal and the less common paludine and paludinous all of which mean having to do with a swamp or marsh similarly something growing or living in swamps or marshes is paludose spanish palúdico can mean having to do with swamps or marshes as well as suffering from malaria 2019 steven schwartzman share this share on facebook opens in new window facebook share on x opens in new window x email a link to a friend opens in new window email share on linkedin opens in new window linkedin share on reddit opens in new window reddit like loading related previous arena next normandy 4 comments add yours maria jun 01 2019 10 47 29 apparently the english paludal and paludine were first seen in england i looked them up in the oxford dictionary which i rarely consult and found that paludian had its origin from mid 19th century and was found in all the year round a victorian periodical founded and owned by charles dickens and published between 1859 and 1895 throughout the united kingdom https en oxforddictionaries com definition paludian paludine was found in mid 19th century earliest use found in francis buckland 1826 1880 pisciculturist and naturalist https en oxforddictionaries com definition paludine oxford dictionary states it may have originated from french paludien or paludéen i much prefer the word paludismo over malaria i didn t know there were english words that evolved differently from the spanish reply steve schwartzman jun 01 2019 18 13 34 it s interesting how many variants on the palud root english developed i don t know why english needed so many of them sometimes spanish and english share words at other times not often that s because english inherited words through french similarly spanish acquired a lot of words from arabic that english doesn t share reply shoreacres jun 01 2019 15 42 54 that s an interesting distinction our salt marsh mosquitoes ochlerotatus sollicitans or aedes sollicitans don t carry malaria but they could be described as paludose everything that s said about them in this article is exactly on target especially this females of this species are aggressive biters taking blood meals from many kinds of animals including birds reptiles and mammals especially humans the species name sollicitans is latin meaning vexing or disturbing they bite aggressively day or night and even mosquitoes that are resting in the tall grasses by day will quickly take flight once disturbed and attack anyone walking thru the area they certainly will i ve seen them in clouds so thick it s hard to believe they re mosquitos and not something more weighty like love bugs reply steve schwartzman jun 01 2019 18 20 33 i m a mosquito magnet so anything that keeps their numbers down is just fine with me the vexing and disturbing senses you mentioned come to the fore when we think about the no soliciting signs that some people and businesses post an online dictionary gives these translations for the latin verb to disturb stir agitate move to distress harass make uneasy vex solicit tempt seduce attract induce reply leave a comment cancel reply δ email subscription enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email email address sign me up rss posts rss comments if you encounter an unfamiliar technical term in any of these postings check the glossary in the bar across the top of the page spanish links diccionario de la real academia española diccionario médico biológico histórico y etimológico el candidato meláncolico la llave del mundo la palabra del día 1 la palabra del día 2 la peña lingüística origen de las palabras english links a walk in the words a word a day dr goodword s language blog onelook dictionary online etymology dictionary the etyman word of the day word routes word spy wordorigins org world wide words spanish english links english words of spanish origin gerald s spanish language blog spanish english false friends spanish english spanish dictionary wordreference spanish english linguistics links the linguist list archives archives select month june 2019 may 2019 march 2019 february 2019 december 2018 november 2018 september 2018 august 2018 july 2018 june 2018 may 2018 april 2018 march 2018 february 2018 january 2018 december 2017 november 2017 october 2017 september 2017 august 2017 july 2017 june 2017 may 2017 april 2017 march 2017 february 2017 january 2017 december 2016 november 2016 october 2016 september 2016 august 2016 july 2016 june 2016 may 2016 april 2016 march 2016 february 2016 january 2016 december 2015 november 2015 october 2015 september 2015 august 2015 july 2015 june 2015 may 2015 april 2015 march 2015 february 2015 january 2015 december 2014 november 2014 october 2014 september 2014 august 2014 july 2014 june 2014 may 2014 april 2014 march 2014 february 2014 january 2014 december 2013 november 2013 october 2013 september 2013 august 2013 july 2013 june 2013 may 2013 april 2013 march 2013 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