Friday, March 14, 2014

"Why is the 'mor' in 'Voldemort' so evil-sounding?"

"Sherlock Holmes's mortal nemesis was Professor Moriarty."
Harry Potter's nemesis was Voldemort.

Doctor Who had a nemesis named Morbius. So did Spider-Man. Morbius was also the name of the antagonist in The Forbidden Planet.

Frodo Baggins went through the mines of Moria to get to Mordor, where he met Sauron, who, as great a villain as he was, started out as the lieutenant of Morgoth, the original and darkest villain in the world of Tolkien's Middle Earth.

So what's the deal with "mor"? Is there something to the syllable that suits it for melancholy, darkness, and villainy?

We have to be careful here. There are more words out there that have "mor" that don't carry such dark tones...

But we can say that it has some dark associations available if we want to use them. For starters, the Latin "mor" root (as in moribund and mortal and French words such as morte) refers to death; there is an old Germanic root mora for darkness, which shows up in words such as murky; our modern word murder comes from an Old English word morth for the same; and, of course, a morgue is a place where dead bodies are kept. That's enough to give a familiar ring.

In fact, "mor" may be what is sometimes called a phonestheme: a part of a word that tends to carry a certain connotation not because of etymology or formal definition but just by association. Words that start with "gl" often have to do with light (glow, gleam, glimmer, glitter, glisten, etc.) even though they are not all related historically; similarly, words that start with "sn" often relate to the nose (snoot, sniffle, snot, snore, sneeze, etc.). It doesn't mean that all words with those letters have the meaning in common, but there is a common thread among a notable set of them. READ MORE
Do you have any phonestheme ringing in you ear, you may like to share?
The Week

19 comments:

chickelit said...

Indole

Unknown said...

Michael Moore.

omg - It's true.

deborah said...

Morgana.

deborah said...

Morlocks.

lemondog said...

Michael Moore.

Morbidly Moronic

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Lol april

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Is the ALT of mALT associated with Altitude, Alta Vista...

chickelit said...

Mordant wit

chickelit said...

Do you ever eat Altoids, Lem?

Methadras said...

Well, since mort is the word for death, the having it embedded in Voldemort and considering who he is/was seems appropriate. However, I did see a bumper sticker the other day on a Prius that said, "Republicans for Voldemort." I lol'ed.

MamaM said...

Do you ever eat Altoids, Lem?

Recognized by their curiously strong flavor!

From the wiki: The history of Altoids dates back to the reign of King George III...They were marketed for a brief period in the 1990s under the "Nuttall's" brand

MamaM said...

Off topic part 2

If Lem has does admit to sucking down more than a few Altoids, here's 22 Manly Ways to Reuse an Altoids Tin

MamaM said...

thanks, chickenlittle, for making me laugh with your 12:57 ALT-turnative, and serving up a refreshing bridge thought.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Altoids? ... can't say as I recall.

MamaM said...

They live in your pocket, Lem, here with you, covered with a bit of lint but curiously strong and distinctly flavored, with the ability to spontaneously levitate others and themselves every now and then, if not at least make them look.

Mor than one might know.

MamaM said...

Darkness is ignorance, lack of light. Evil is predatory, grasping, continually wanting mor!

According to one story, this has been an ongoing problem since genesis.

deborah said...

Lem:
"Is the ALT of mALT associated with Altitude, Alta Vista..."

Altered state of consciousness...

Known Unknown said...

Morticia Addams

This is a great post, btw.

Synova said...

I thought it was really interesting that nonne and nonne are the same word and mean the same thing in Latin and in Japanese.

Um... for "mor" I'm going to vote for the Raven poem thing...

... nevermoooooore.