Monday, September 7, 2009

When Commonly Used Words Got Their Start - Labor Day Edition



Now here is your lesson for Labor Day - While you may inspire a new word, you may not like how it will follow you to your grave... For example, look how General Motors first inspired today's word... but then ignored it, only to rediscover it... all over again... But just like a spurned lover, the new version now only lives to remind them, what fools they were to forget so easily....Ohhh the vitriol of words that change on you....


DOWNSIZE (1975)



Future historians will probably choose October 1973 as the most significant
month and year of the twentieth century. It was in that month that the members
of OPEC (the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) imposed
their first oil embargo against the industrialized nations of the Western world.

As fuel prices began their relentless climb, American motorists turned increasingly to small, fuel-efficient cars from Japan. Detroit, the North American automotive capital, eventually got the message — and began trimming the fat from its corpulent gas guzzlers. A new word was needed to describe what was happening, and Time was one of the first magazines to use it on September 13, 1976: “All the automakers are already at work down-sizing their cars for 1978 and later years.”

When the 1978 models appeared, many of them had the lean — but not hungry — look. The four intermediate cars from General Motors had been downsized by about eight inches and had lost up to eight hundred and twenty-five pounds of superfluous tonnage. But, as the Second Barnhart Dictionary of New English points out, not everyone was happy with this new word: “Technicially to downsize means to reduce the exterior dimensions of an automobile while the passenger area and trunk remain the same or are increased. Car manufacturers and others in the industry prefer the older word resized to describe the new generation of smaller cars, claiming that downsized suggests a degrading of the product’s appearance or quality.”

Now that we have entered the twenty-first century, downsize has taken on a new primary usage: as a euphemism for corporate decisions to lay off or fire large numbers of people at once.

(From- 500 YEARS OF NEW WORDS BY BILL SHERK © Bill Sherk 2004)

Moral: When you don't pay enough attention: except to your bottom line, nor to what other folks are doing, and what most people expect of you, you may pay a price, you suddenly can't pass on to the consumer....

Lest we forget...

That this is Labor Day, to celebrate all those who "work hard for the money"..

Presented is a photo I found last night, while looking for something to illustrate my blog of today...

Power to the people...even this often forgotten group.... LOL

On Work and Leisure: Happy Labor Day!


It's Labor Day - So to honor that holiday, where we take a break from our labors, and pay homage to the working man, I present a selection of quotes from one of my many electronic books, this one titled:
101 Reasons Not To Do Anything -A Collection of Cynical & Defeatist Quotations


If I were a medical man, I should prescribe a holiday to any patient who considered his work important.
Bertrand Russell


There is one piece of advice, in a life of study, which I think no one will object to; and that is, every now and then to be completely idle, – to do nothing at all.
Sydney Smith - Sketches of Moral Philosophy


Leisure is the mother of Philosophy.
Thomas Hobbes - Leviathan iv, 46


There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is having lots to do and not doing it.
Mary Wilson Little


Procrastination – the art of keeping up with yesterday.
Don Marquis


Work is the scythe of time.
Napoleon Bonaparte, 1815


Work is the refuge of people who have nothing better to do.
Oscar Wilde


Never put off until tomorrow what you can do the day after tomorrow just as well.
Mark Twain - The Late Benjamin Franklin


My father taught me to work, but not to love it. I never did like to work, and I don’t deny it. I’d rather read, tell stories, crack jokes, talk, laugh – anything but work.
Abraham Lincoln


Hard work has never killed anyone, but it frightens some people half to death.
Aldous Huxley


By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may eventually get to be a boss and work twelve hours a day.
Robert Frost


They say hard work never hurt anybody, but I figure: why take the chance?
Ronald Reagan


If people really liked to work, we’d still be ploughing the land with sticks and transporting goods on our backs.
William Feather


Anybody who works is a fool. I don’t work, I merely inflict myself on the public.
Robert Morley


Work is the only dirty four-letter word in the language.
Abbie Hoffman - Harpers Magazine, 1970


Happy Labor Day Everyone!