In my 5/21 post, I brought up a term: word back. Used in a sentence: "I want my word back." Words in my English language have been stolen by corrupt people with no clue about the word's origins and what it really means. This is a travesty in my book, and I have a really big book on my side: The Oxford English Dictionary or, as we English majors call it, the O.E.D. Many of our public libraries used to have the book splayed open on a stand. Oddball students such as myself could peruse at their leisure, or make a beeline to it during a heated argument over the origin of a word or phrase. Yes, heated arguments about words. How I miss those. And the main reason I went dateless most of my college career.
Today's
word is "make." And yes, it's the first word in the acronym MAGA.
Those are the four words I will tackle during the next couple weeks. They are
real words, not just initials on a red ballcap.
What
are we to make of make? Let the O.E.D. be our guide.
I
hate to begin with a downer but, to save time, I must. Make can be a noun. In
fact, it is a variant for maggot. Here's an example from Shakespeare’s “Hamlet”
circa 1604: “Your
worme is your onely Emperour for dyet, we fat all creatures els to fat vs, and
wee fat our selues for maggots.”
In
more modern terms, we have this line by Mae West in 1930's "Constant
Sinner:" "The double-crossin' heel! The
garbage-can maggot!"
You
don't see "make" in there. But, it is a variant which means it's
rarely used except by historical fiction writers and time travelers. But the reference comes alive in 2025 because critics poke fun at MAGA
followers by calling them MAGATS or MAGHATS or just MAGGOTS. We don't use the
term as it's below our station to do so even though it's hilarious.
Make
is usually used as a verb that means to produce. Let's let Merriam-Webster have
a crack at this: Make (transitive verb): to bring into being by forming, shaping, or
altering material; to lay out and construct, to compose or write.
Back
to the O.E.D.: The earliest known use of the word is in the Old English Period
pre-1150. It has Germanic roots. It's use in Old English includes references in
literature, music, and religion.
Does the O.E.D. have anything to say about
sexual references in popular culture? I didn’t look. But I have some examples. Let's make out
(kiss, etc.). “Making Whoopee” (song about kissing etc.), "I want to Make
It With You," a popular 1970s song by Bread which is really about sex as
in "Love the One You're With" or so says Stephen Stills. Let's make a
baby is a line used by married couples in rom-coms. "Wanna make sex?" is not a common
term although it has been used in dingy bars at closing time.
"To
make" is a very positive act. A maker is one who makes. A Makerspace is a
place dedicated to making things usually artwork. My artist daughter visits a
local Makerspace. Many public libraries have makerspaces in their
children's/teens sections. Many of these libraries are under attack by Trump
& Company and local right-wing kooks. Many makerspaces are funded by
government grants which are being eliminated by the GOP-controlled Congress.
Makers,
themselves, are under attack for being too woke and not appreciating all the
MAGA Goodness spread like fairy dust by Donnie and Elon. Arts workers jobs are
being eliminated along with budgets for state and local arts agencies as well
as the National Endowment for the Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities,
and the Institute of Museum and Library Services. To tell an artist he or she
can't make any more is absurd. That's like telling us not to breathe. But it will hurt all of us, this pilfering of money for the arts and humanities.
Merriam-Webster
lists these antonyms (opposites): Dismantle, destroy, eradicate, abolish, take
apart, etc., etc.
To Make. Think about it.
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