Customer Reviews
complete waste of money - By: A. hye, 30 Jul 2007 
I am someone who has actually bought this book & not just writing a review for the sake of writing it or what the reason the other guy has written his review. I doubt he has read it or owned it.
This book is a complete waste of money. This is hardly a dictionary. Printed on poor quality paper & large type there are only about 3 to 4 definitions per. Also this is an American book & there fore has many phrases that are alien to the British reader. Arkansas toothpick is an example. A lot of the expressionsin this book are out dated. This book is completely useless if you want to look up modern phrases.
Intriguing, Instructional, Curious - By: A.Trendl HungarianBookstore.com, 25 Feb 2005 
Jordan Almond's "Dictionary of Word Origins" is an intriguing look at phrases & words we all toss about apart from their original meaning. This book is about those original meanings of cliches.
This is different than most 'unusual word' dictionaries. Usually, you'll get the term, maybe a pronunciation & a short definiton. Instead, here we are introduced to where the word came from. He explains it carefullyin layman's language. He doesn't gussy up his book with high-fallootin' lexographical phrasology.
For example, he defines (for a camel to pass through the) "eye of a needle" by describing it biblical origination, & connects it with a Jewish town gateway so small only pedestrians & the smallest of camels can pass through, not large camels (hence, protecting the town from pillagers). Christ famously refers to thisin the New Testament, forever placing the phrasein our vernacular.
Jordan tosses our way what 'doughboy,' 'hair of the dog,' 'grandfather clock,' 'corn,' 'boondoggle,' 'nose to the grindstone."
'Manna' for example, means, "What is it?" as the Isrealites had no idea what they were being given. 'Maudlin,' Jordan reveals, is from the British pronunciation of 'Magdalene,' & that early artists painted Mary Magdalene with a dour demeanor.
Editorial historians might differ with Jordan as per the precise origin of 'OK.' They would argue that it was a silly joke--an intended deviation of "all correct" (oll korekt) as written on acceptable copy. Jordan suggests that it is from Martin Van Buren's nickname of Old Kinderhook while he ran for office.
Knowing this is not a scientific text, you can enjoy this as I did, as something to wander through while sipping tea & munching warm scones on an early Saturday morning. Linguists, cultural anthropologists might all disagree about the beginnings of words, but, for me, it was a fun, educational read.
I fully recommend "Dictionary of Word Origins" by Jordan Almond.
Anthony Trendl