Hypnopedia is first recorded in Aldous Huxley’s dystopian novel Brave New World (1932), and the word may well be a coinage of his. Hypnopedia is a compound word formed from the Greek nouns ýԴDz “sleep” and 貹í “child-rearing, education.” ýԴDz is a regular Greek development of the Proto-Indo-European noun sup-nos, from the root swep, swop-, sup- “to sleep.” In preclassical Latin the noun swep-nos becomes swop-nos and finally somnus in classical Latin. The Germanic equivalent root, swef-no-, becomes swefen “sleep, dream” in Old English and sweven in Middle English, e.g., in Piers Plowman and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. ʲí is a derivative of the noun 貹í (stem paid-) “child.”
Years of intensive hypnopaedia and, from twelve to seventeen, Malthusian drill three times a week had made the taking of these precautions almost as automatic and inevitable as blinking.
The idea that humans can learn while asleep, a concept sometimes called hypnopedia, has a long and odd history. It hit a particularly strange note in 1927, when New York inventor A. B. Saliger debuted the Psycho-phone. He billed the device as an “automatic suggestion machine.”
noun
British, Australian. a small container or basket for strawberries or other fruit.
In the “Cyclops” episode (chapter 12) of Ulysses, there are 33 parodies in exaggerated, sentimental, or pompous styles. The first of these parodies begins “In Inisfail the fair,” a parody of a poem by the Irish poet James Mangin (1803-49), and contains, among other things, an extravagant list of Irish products: “… pearls of the earth, and punnets of mushrooms and custard marrows….” A punnet is a light, shallow container for fruits or other produce. The word is used in Ireland, England, and Australia but not in America. Its origin is uncertain. Punnet entered English in the 19th century.
Next time you buy strawberries take a look a good look in the punnet. Do the berries still have the stem attached or has it been plucked off leaving only the green hat of leaves called the calyx?
We’ve each got a cardboard tray with twenty-five punnets in, and our job’s to fill each punnet with ripe strawberries, or nearly ripe.
noun
equal rights of citizenship, as in different communities; mutual political rights.
The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 b.c.) was the first author to use DZDZīٱí “equality of civic rights.” DZDZīٱí applied to individuals and communities; it also meant reciprocity of such rights between states (as by treaty). ʴDZīٱí “citizenship, daily life of a citizen, body of citizens; government, polity, constitution” is a derivative of the noun ó “citadel (of a city), city, one’s city or country.” ó comes the very complicated Proto-Indo-European root pel-, ǝ-, ŧ- “citadel, fortified elevation, city.” The same root yields the Sanskrit noun ū́ “citadel, city” (Singapur “Singapore” means “Lion City”), and Lithuanian 辱ì “citadel, castle.” Isopolity entered English in the 19th century.
Isopolity agreements offered states and their citizens a way to share most fully in each other’s judicial systems, political processes, religious and cultural life, without giving up their prized mutual autonomy.
In the nineteenth century, the British lawyer and legal theorist A. V. Dicey proposed the creation of a common citizenship, or “isopolity,” between the United States and the United Kingdom.