Showing posts sorted by date for query besiege. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query besiege. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Harass

Harass (pronounced huh-ras (U) or har-uhs (Non-U))

(1) To disturb or bother persistently; torment, as with troubles or cares; pester.

(2) To intimidate or coerce, as with persistent demands or threats.

(3) To subject another to unwelcome sexual advances.

(4) In military and paramilitary jargon, to trouble by repeated attacks, incursions etc, as in war or hostilities; harry; raid.

1610–1620: From the French harasser (to tire out; to vex), the origin obscure but probably from the Middle French harasser (to harry, harass), a verbal derivative of harace & harache from the Frankish hara (here, from this side) which existed in the Old French as harer (to set a dog upon prey) and of Germanic origin; the Old High German was hera & harēn (to cry out), the Middle Dutch was here.  The alternative, less supported, etymology suggests a derivation from the Old French harier (to harry), related to harace (a basket made of cords) & harasse (a very heavy and large shield).  The now obsolete meaning “to lay waste, to devastate” dates from the 1620s whereas the sense "to vex by repeated attacks" from the French harasser (to tire out, to vex) emerged in the early sixteenth century and the noun harassment (action of harassing; state of being harassed) was first noted in 1753.  Harass, as applied to mind or body, suggesting the infliction of the weariness that comes from the continuance or repetition of trying experiences, so that there is not time for rest, appeared in dictionaries first in 1897.  The distinction of meaning is that to feel harassed doesn’t (necessarily) depend on an identifiable act of harassment by others.  Synonyms, varying by context, include badger, vex, plague, hector, annoy, besiege, harangue, beset, burn, raid, tease, intimidate, pester, torment, persecute, heckle, hassle, hound, maraud, bait, distress, exhaust, strain, vex, foray, worry & devil.  Harass is a noun & verb, harassing is an adjective & noun, harasser & harassment are nouns, harassed & harassable are adjectives and harassingly is an adverb; the noun plural is harasses.

Another class-identifier

Harass was traditionally pronounced in English as har-uhs, with stress on the first syllable but a newer pronunciation, huh-ras, with stress on the second, has become more common in the last half-century, especially in North America.  Although there’s no evidence, the speculation is the newer form emerged because it’s easier to say and there’s much support for the view, the feeling it happened just as kuhn-trov-er-see emerged as more palatable alternative to the traditional and proper kon-truh-vur-see.  Most dictionaries now acknowledge both forms are correct, the cross-cutting cleavages being both trans-Atlantic and generational, the inference generally drawn that the younger version will continue to gain adherents while the traditional form will survive among pedants and as a class-identifier.

Cross-vested harassment complaints: Ms Lohan & Mr LaBella.

In what sounded a very New York City sort of affair, Lindsay Lohan (b 1986) and Christian LaBella (b 1987) in September 2012 each filed harassment complaints with against each other after they were interviewed by police about a squabble in a hotel room, the details of which remain contested and sketchy.  Mr LaBell was a former congressional aide and because no charges could be substantiated, no further was taken, the cross-harassment complaints apparently satisfying honor on both sides.  All's well that ends well.

Friday, May 27, 2022

Besiege

Besiege (pronounced bih-seej)

(1) In military parlance, to lay siege to (to surround a fortified area, especially a city) with military forces to bring about its surrender.

(2) To crowd around; crowd in upon; surround:

(3) To assail or ply, as with requests or demands.

1250-1300: From the Middle English besegen & bisegen, the construct being be- + siege.  The be- prefix is from the Middle English be- & bi- from the Old English be- from the Proto-Germanic bi- (be-) (near, by), ultimately from the primitive Indo-European hepi (at, near); source of the Modern English by.  Siege is from the Middle English sege from Old French sege, siege & seige (from which Modern French gained siège) from the Vulgar Latin sēdicum from the Latin sēdicŭlum & sēdēcula (small seat), from the Latin sēdēs (seat).  An alternative spelling during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was syege but it didn’t survive the evolution into Modern English.  Although not wholly synonymous, related words include encircle, beleaguer, beset, blockade, trap, harass, hound, plague, pester, invest, attack, congregate, environ, assail, encompass, confine, nag, importune, harry, trouble & harry.  Besiege, besieged & besieging are verbs, besiegement & besieger are nouns and besiegingly is an adverb.  

Historic meanings

Siege is one of the words in English which, purely by organic evolution, now has essentially one meaning (in both a military & figurative sense) but which, from time to time, enjoyed many meanings, all now obsolete.  They included:

(1) A seat, especially as used by someone of importance or authority.
(2) An ecclesiastical office’s geographical limits.
(3) The place where one has their home, residence or domain.
(4) A toilet seat.
(5) The anus; the rectum.
(6) Excrements, stool, fecal matter.
(7) Rank; grade; station; estimation.
(8) The floor of a glass-furnace.
(9) A workman's bench.
(10) A place with a toilet seat: outhouse; the loo, lavatory.

Besieged by demons: St Catherine of Siena besieged by demons, tempera and gold on panel by an anonymous artist from Lesser Poland, circa 1500.  On display in the National Museum, Warsaw since 1947.

Besieged by fan mail: Lindsay Lohan and the "Free Lindsay" campaign, Los Angeles, 2012.