For your next trivia night ...
"Ramsman" wrote in message
...
On 03/07/2011 07:25, Dave Kearton wrote:
Cheers
Dave Kearton
Bit contentious this.
According to several sources, including the Oxford Dictionary and Dutch
etymologists, 'pilot' is derived from the French 'pilote', from mediaeval
Latin 'pilotus', variation of of pedo(t) ta, from Greek 'pedon', oar, pl.
rudder. A pilot is therefore one who steers, Samuel Langhorne Clemens
notwithstanding.
According to Dutch language sites, the 'peil/lood' connection was sought
in the past, but not proven.
The Dutch for the pilot who guides ships is 'loods', i.e. leadsman, the
man with the lead (lood). A flier is a 'piloot'.
Sorry to rain on your parade, but we pedants have to keep busy.
--
Peter
Pedants of the work unite!
Cheers,
Indrek Aavisto
--
Criticism is easy; achievement is difficult W.S. Churchill
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