Monday, October 21, 2019

Albatross and Alcatraz Island

Albatross and Alcatraz Island Albatross and Alcatraz Island Albatross and Alcatraz Island By Maeve Maddox Even speakers who have had the misfortune of never studying Coleridges long poem Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798) are acquainted with the figurative meaning of the word albatross: A source or mark of misfortune, guilt, etc., from which one cannot (easily) be free; a burden or encumbrance. Is Sarah Palin becoming an albatross around the neck of John McCain? Brown vs. Coakley Shows Obama Has Become a Political Albatross Ever since youve married me, Douglas, youve treated me like an albatross. Sleep has been the albatross around the neck of my parenting life for the past six years. Is Intellect an Albatross? albatross syndrome: when faith has been killed and the believer must now wear it as a dead albatross An albatross is a large seabird. In sailor lore, the albatross is considered to be lucky. In Coleridges poem, a thoughtless sailor shoots an albatross with his crossbow. The dead bird falls onto the deck. Shortly afterwards, the ship is becalmed and the crew believe that their predicament has been caused by the killing of the albatross. To distance themselves from the act, they tie the dead bird around the neck of the man who killed it: Ah! well-a-day! what evil looks †¨ Had I from old and young! †¨Instead of the cross, the Albatross †¨ About my neck was hung. The word albatross came into English in the 16th century as alcatras, from Spanish and Portuguese words meaning pelican: alcatraz. The Spanish word probably came from Arabic al-qatras, sea eagle. Since English already had the word pelican, the new borrowing came to be applied to different white birds. Eventually the spelling changed to albatross, influenced by Latin albus, white. The word pelican can be found in Old English, although the word didnt take on the meaning of a sea bird until Middle English. Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay got its name from the pelicans that once roosted there. A Spaniard, Manuel de Ayala, charted San Francisco Bay in 1775. He named the island La Isla de los Alcatraces, The Island of the Pelicans. The plural of albatross is albatrosses (ugh) or albatross. In golf, an albatross is a score of three under par on a hole, or a hole played in three under par Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Expressions category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:30 Religious Terms You Should Know41 Words That Are Better Than GoodComma Before Too?

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