Wednesday, January 8, 2020
Hoard vs. Horde How to Choose the Right Word
The words hoard and hordeà areà homophones: They sound alike but have different meanings and histories, although both have been associated with barbarians and their activities. How to Use Hoard The term hoard is derived from the Old English word hord, dated to the 10th century, which is found in the Anglo-Saxon poem Beowulf. In the poem, Beowulf is an old man when he hears that a dragon who has a room heaped high with treasure has been angered by a slave who stole a jeweled cup from his hoard. The modern English noun hoard refers to an accumulation or collection of something valuable that is hidden away or preserved for later use, similar to cache. As a verb, hoard means to collect and store away or to keep something to oneself. The word also refers to Viking booty stolen from hapless Anglo-Saxons. Forgotten Viking hoards, such as the Cuerdale and Silverdale hoards, are still occasionally found in caches in the United Kingdom. The word hoard is used in this sense to refer to deposits found from many different ancient civilizations, saved for both ritual and/or financial purposes. Hoarding behavior, that is to say the practice of storing excess goods away for future use, is something that many animals do. One could argue that keeping a savings account is hoarding. But in humans, excessive hoarding is often viewed as a sign of mental disturbance, as shown in the reality television program Buried Alive. Recent sociological studies have found that people hoard things for many different reasons: Because they are concerned about wasteAs a social critique of modern culture and its overinvolvement with material thingsBecause the objects have meaning with regard to interpersonal relationships with other humansBecause they have no better storage facility in which to keep thingsà Beowulf and a Treasured Hord The earliest use of the word hord is in Beowulf, the oldest surviving tale in English. Beowulf was written in Old English in about 700 CE (based on the form of the language), and the oldest copy in existence is dated 1000 CE. The poem is all about swords and sorceryââ¬âa heroic prince named Beowulf battles a monstrous dragon named Grendel. In Beowulf, hord is primarily used to mean Grendels cache of jewels. However, Beowulfs main sword is referred to by 17 different metaphors, including hord. Swords were a sign of wealth and the symbol of rank in early German society, and this particular weapon was truly exceptionalââ¬âan iron sword bound with gold named Hrunting. According to American philologist J. R. Hall, the poet of Beowulf used hord as a metaphor for a treasured sword, a precious object that would easily fit into a hoard. Hord was used in other Old English manuscripts as a metaphor for the human soul, Christ, or the crucifix.à Those uses are not present in modern English language. How to Use Horde The noun horde means a crowd, throng, or swarm of wild or fierce people; a gang or crew. The word originates from the Tartar word urda, which means royal camp, first used in English in the 16th century to refer to the companies of the descendants of 12th-century warrior Genghis Khans Golden Horde or Altun Ordu. Examples Hoard always refers to a collection of objects or animals when used as a noun and to the collecting of those objects or animals when used as a verb. An unemployed man with a metal detector stumbled upon one of the greatest hoards of Anglo-Saxon treasure ever discovered in Britain.Mary hoarded her paperweight collection in her safe deposit box, certain that her children would want to sell it after she was gone.Mr. Smith kept a hoard of cats on his farm: dozens of cats hidden away in cages or running free. Horde always refers to a large group of living humans or animals. Nintendos new video game system has attracted hordes of casual gamers.When the morning bell rang, a horde of teachers came piling out of the staff room.The Golden Horde was a khanate of the Mongol Empire, a military force that conquered the Viking descendants Rus in northwestern Russia in the 13th century. How to Remember the Difference Horde and hoard are easily confused because the spelling differences are relatively minor. Remember that horde (with an e and no a) is like an erupting nest of angry hornets (think horde of hornets); whereas hoard (with an a and no e) refers to a precious treasure that is kept by a dragon (also spelled with an a and no e). Sources Byers, Ann. The Golden Horde and the Rise of Moscow. New York: Rosen Publishing, 2017.DeWeese, Devin. Islamization and Native Religion in the Golden Horde: Baba Tà ¿kles and Conversion to Islam in Historical and Epic Tradition. University Park: Pennsylvania State University, 2010.Fogarty, Mignon. Hoard Versus Horde. Grammar Girls 101 Misused Words Youll Never Confuse Again. New York: St. Martins Griffin, 2011. p. 66.Hall, J. R. The Sword Hrunting in Beowulf: Unlocking the Word Hord. Studies in Philology, 109.1, 2012, pp. 1-18.Hoard.à OED Online. Oxford University Press, December 2018.Horde.à OED Online. Oxford University Press, December 2018.Orr, David M. R., Michael Preston-Shoot, and Suzy Braye. Meaning in Hoarding: Perspectives of People Who Hoard on Clutter, Culture and Agency. Anthropology Medicine,à 12 Dec. 2017, pp. 1-17.
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