Proverbs/CATS

Friday, January 9, 2015

Sweet Confetti

In Latin class yesterday my seventh-grade students were wrestling with the word confectus, a, um, an adjective meaning finished. I asked if anyone could think of an English derivative from this word, and several students suggested confection and confectionary sugar. We discussed that confections--sweet treats often made with confectionary sugar-- are often eaten at the end of a meal, and therefore they finish the meal. And so we determined that confectus, a, um means "finished."As we were talking, I also wondered about the word confetti, an Italian word brought into English. According to my dictionary confetti, from the Latin confectus, a, um, was originally candy or "candy" made from plaster thrown at carnivals or other festive events, and then later was replaced with bits of paper as we know confetti today. Etymology is definitely a sweet treat.

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