39 points
*

I went to fact check this. It’s real but I feel like we’re missing out on something here

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18 points

lol whore’s eggs

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Explains why Frank would have eaten them.

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3 points

Amazing.

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34 points

Street urchins aka boulevard hedgehogs

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34 points

In dutch they are literally called sea-hedgehog. (zee-egel)

So, while latin and all is nice, there’s always the dutch way of “doe maar normaal dan doe je gek genoeg”. Which translates into: just behave as regular, that’s more than enough excitement.

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18 points

same in German, Seeigel

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12 points

Same in Spanish, but from a different root-word. Erizo del mar, which erizo is just a normal hedgehog

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10 points

Same in Slovene. Morski jež - sea hedgehog

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13 points

Dutch isn’t real

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1 point

Je bent niet echt

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7 points

It’s actually the same in italian, ricci di mare

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4 points

“doe normaal…”

In french they’re “oursins”, apparently from bears, which they thought had very hard fur.

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2 points

Similarly, seals? Sea dogs.

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23 points
*

See, this is why etymology is such a fascinating field, and why learning Latin and Greek are still worthwhile.

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1 point

Do you speak Latin? I’m trying to learn Latin for fun, and I would like some recommendations. I already have the first Lingua Latina Per Se Illustrata PDF.

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1 point

I do (or did) speak Latin. Nowadays it’s mostly bits and pieces.

I’m sorry, but I don’t have anything to recommend

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5 points

I’m confused! Doesn’t urchin really relate to children?

Is that a colloquialism or more English-on-drugs?

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11 points

The use of “urchin” to refer to children is separate from its original meaning.

Maybe it became that as a word for something underfoot?

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2 points

I like this one the best!

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9 points
*

Thats a street urchin. Strangely, this blog post was one of the first links that came up. It ponders how the name street urchin came to be.

It says

Looking in the OED, I see two possibly relevant definitions. 1c. A goblin or elf. (From the supposition that they occasionally assumed the form of a hedgehog.)… There is also 4a. A pert, mischievous, or roguish youngster; a brat.

Edit: formatting is crazy

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4 points

In French, oursin (urchin) seems to be the diminutive of ours, which means bear. So oursin means something like “little bear”.

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