Angel

Angel is not a word from Proto Indo European; it began as a term in some unknown Asian language, perhaps related to Sanskrit ajira, “swift”. This term was borrowed into Greek at some point — the Greeks had a great deal of commerce with southern Russia, Turkey, and the Middle East — and became both angaros, “mounted courier”, and angelos, “messenger”. When the Bible was written in Greek, angelos was chosen to translate the Hebrew term mal’akh yhwh, “messenger of God”. When the Bible was translated into Latin, instead of using a Latin term for “messenger”, such as cursor or nuntium, the word angelos was borrowed over as angelus. This then descended into English as angel.

The sounds of angel indicate an elastic, spread-out energy that narrows toward a troubled or difficult decision point, before relaxing into a liquid light/air state. The primary stressed syllable (”ang”) carries the focus of the meaning, which is the gathering of the energy to the decision point. Presumably this refers to the action of the angels in guiding their charges through difficult times.

angel.jpg

Druid Journal: Guidance and inspiration from Nature and the Ancient World.

Subscribe to the Druid Journal Word of the Day, and receive the Word via regular email or through your favorite feed reader.

Subscribe to Druid Journal Word of the Day in a reader
Subscribe to Druid Journal Word of the Day by Email

Related Posts

6 Responses to “Angel”

  1. Slade | Spiritual Blogging Says:

    I did not know of the connection with “cursor” — but it’s a rich one that resonates with me — the merging intersection of technology and creative spirit.

    I’m so glad you are my Linguist.

    Slade

  2. Jeff Lilly Says:

    Hey, glad to oblige. ;-) It’s interesting how the cursor represents the point of attention — the place where the human’s focus sits most strongly, the point where the person and machine are focusing their joint effort most tightly. (Cursor originally meant “runner”, and is a terminological holdover from the days of the slide rule. I’ll stick it on my list…)

  3. Michelle Says:

    Lovely one, I’m rather relieved they chose “angelos” - I’d feel weird saying “Arch-cursor Michael” or “Guardian Cursor”. lol

  4. Jeff Lilly Says:

    That would be funny! And it sounds a little too close to “curser” (one who curses), doesn’t it? How about nuntium? Guardian Nuntium? Archnuntium? –Sounds like it belongs on the periodic table…

  5. Michelle Says:

    I hadn’t thought of the corsor-curser sound link. With that in mind, perhaps Lucifer was an Arch Cursor?

    For some reason I can imagine planting Guardian Nuntiums in a hot house. ;)

  6. Jeff Lilly Says:

    :-D

Leave a Reply

Subscribe without commenting

Recent Comments Elsewhere

  • Jeff Lilly on Tomato: Sorry to take so long in replying, Kate -- I had to think about this a while. What would I regard as good evidence that one of the premises or assu...
  • Kate Gladstone on Tomato: Well, I look forward to seeing what you'll tackle in future Words of the Day! I have to say that phonosemantics does not convince me anywhere nearl...
  • Jeff Lilly on Beauty: I'll put them in the queue, Kate. :-) Booty, briefly, is just like beauty, but lacks the connotations of energy, trust, and youth. ...
  • Jeff Lilly on Tomato: Kate, these are all excellent questions, and I certainly don't have definite answers. I have guesses, though... Different pronunciations of a word...
  • Jeff Lilly on Find the Meaning of Your Name: Becca, please accept my apologies. I have been extremely busy with work for most of this year, and I have had to set aside many very important things...