Wednesday, August 31, 2011

For my -ism dancers

Here is the document we used today for making gestures. If you didn't finish, please try and have your 7 snapshots with legs ready for next time:


-ISM:
— suffix forming nouns
1.            indicating an action, process, or result: criticism ; terrorism
2.            indicating a state or condition: paganism
3.            indicating a doctrine, system, or body of principles and practices: Leninism ; spiritualism
4.            indicating behaviour or a characteristic quality: heroism
5.            indicating a characteristic usage, esp of a language: colloquialism ; Scotticism
6.            indicating prejudice on the basis specified: sexism ; ageism

Etymology
Ultimately from either Ancient Greek -ισμός (-ismos), a suffix that forms abstract nouns of action, state, condition, doctrine;from stem of verbs in -ιζειν (-izein) (whence English -ize), or from the related suffix was Ancient Greek -ισμα (-isma), which more specifically expressed a finished act or thing done.
Many English nouns in -ism are loans of Greek nouns in -ισμός (mostly via Latin and French), such as baptism from βαπτισμός (loaned from Old French ca. 1300), or Judaism from ουδαισμός (a learned English formation based on Latin, coined ca. 1500). In Late Latin, the -ismus suffix became the ordinary ending for names of religions and ecclesiastical or philosophical systems or schools of thought, thus chrīstiānismus (whence 16th c. Christianism) in Tertullian, a trend continued in Medieval Latin, with e.g. pāgānismus attested by the 8th century. From the 16th century, such formations became very common in English, until the early 18th century mostly restricted to either root words of Greek or Latin origin (heroism, patriotism) or proper names (Calvinism, Lutheranism). Productivity from root words with evidently non-Latin and non-Greek origin dates to the late 18th century (e.g. blackguardism). Reflecting this productivity, use of ism as a standalone noun is attested by Edward Pettit (1680) and becomes common from the mid 18th century. The narrowed sense of forming terms for ideologies based on the belief of superiority is a "draft addition" submitted to OED in 2004, based on coinages such as racism (1932) or sexism (1936) and productive since the 1970s.
forming nouns on action or process or result based on the accompanying verb in -ize
baptism (1300)
aphorism (1528)
criticism (1607)
magnetism (1616)
forming the name of a system, school of thought or theory based on the name of its subject or object or alternatively on the name of its founder ((when de-capitalized, these overlap with the generic "terms for doctrines" sense below, e.g. Liberalism vs. liberalism):).
Lutheranism (1560)
Calvinism (1570)
Protestantism (1606)
Congregationalism (1716)
Mohammedanism (1815)
Palamism (1949)
the action, conduct or condition of a class of persons, "behaving like a ---" ((with overtones of the "terms for doctrines" sense below):)
atheism (1587)
blackguardism (1875)
despotism (1728)
heroism (1717)
old-maidism (1776)
patriotism (1716)
ruffianism (1589)
class-names or descriptive terms for doctrines or principles in general
giantism (1639)
fanaticism (1652)
theism (1678)
religionism (1706)
nationism (1798)
romanticism (1803)
conservatism (1832)
sexualism (1842)
externalism (1856)
opportunism (1870)
jingoism (1878)
feminism (1895)
dwarfism (1895)
racism (1932)
sexism (1936)
a peculiarity or characteristic of language
Atticism (1612)
Gallicism (1656)
archaism (1709)
Americanism (1781)
colloquialism (1834)
newspaperism (1838)
Shakespearianism (1886)
an ideology expressing belief in the superiority of a certain class within the concept expressed by the root word ((based on a late 20th-century narrowing of the "terms for a doctrine" sense):)
speciesism (1975)
heterosexism (1979)
ableism (1981)

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