Welcome to Words Matter, Dynamic Literacy's newsletter. 
We have something special just for you.
Welcome to issue #29 of  Words Matter, our bi-weekly newsletter .  Please feel free to share with a friend! 
Here's the good stuff.
Let's Get Together

A word we've been seeing and hearing lately is caucus, a Roman-looking word if there ever was one.  However, the word is one of very few that can claim to be American English, a genuine New World coinage.

The published diaries and letters of John Adams (second POTUS) reveal the first known printed usage of the word.  He mentioned in February of 1763 that a certain "caucus club" was regularly held at the home of a fellow Bostonian.  Another even earlier figure in American history gives us a clue about the word. 



Captain John Smith, one of the Virginia leaders of the Jamestown settlement, mentions in his History of Virginia (1624) an Algonquian word he was familiar with, very similar to caucus, meaning "advice giver" or "counselor".


It happens that the Algonquian tribes lived along the Atlantic seaboard and were the first to greet the early English settlers.  Later, the English colonists would adopt native American words to name their secret meetings for discussing discontent with the mother country, and by the mid-19th century, caucus was well entrenched in American English as the word for a lively meeting to discuss and decide on political candidates.


By 1853 the British had adopted the term from their former subjects, and Lewis Carroll (the Alice in Wonderland author we talked about a few weeks ago) was poking fun at " caucus " races.  From there, the word spread all over the English-speaking world.

Other political words that American English adopted from the Algonquians are mugwump, "great man" (made famous in the 1884 election) and sachem "chief" (from the Tammany Hall "Boss" Tweed era ).  And if you've ever had a pow-wow, a meeting to supervise ("look over") a problem, you're carrying on a long-standing American tradition.  --R. D. "Doc" Larrick

Morpheme of the week:   The prefix SUPER

Enjoy this brief student video that comes directly from WordBuild Foundations Level 2. 
The prefix SUPER
The prefix SUPER

Please add our email address to your address book to ensure that you receive these emails and stay in the know. 

Jerry Bailey
President & CEO
Parents & Home Educators 
SAVE 10-25%
Take 10-25% off your purchase

Use coupon code NEWS16 to save 25% on WordBuild Books and CDs, and 10% on WordBuildOnLine

Only valid for prepaid orders.
 

Dynamic Literacy
888-696-8597 | Fax: 888-768-2906