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Today I had to decide whether a dowager in 1801 would have been more likely to “draw near” or “draw nigh.” It was easy. I mean, really easy. A few years ago, when it was merely somewhat easy, I would have been forced to rely on the little voice inside me that whispered, “Come on, bonehead, only trashy romance novels have characters drawing nigh, usually as they unfrock their comely bosoms.” But today I found my answer by heading straight to Google Ngram Viewer.
Do you ever use this remarkable language tool? I generally get blank stares when I mention it to people. But it’s well worth experimenting with, even if you’re not a writer.
Ngram Viewer is a byproduct of Google’s mass absorption of the world’s published works, more or less from Gutenberg to the present. Billions of words and phrases from millions of books now reside in Google’s chronological database.
An ngram, which sounds like something out of Scientology, is a unit of language — where n is the number of words in the phrase you want to study. Type in your word or phrase, choose the language database you want to search (your options include British, American, and other flavors of English), and specify the time span you’re interested in. Google then looks at all phrases of similar length in all books and journals within your chosen period, and calculates the percentage of phrases that match yours. This is usually a tiny fraction of 1 percent, many zeroes past the decimal point and not illuminating in itself (unless the number happens to be straight zeroes — that tells you a lot). But when many such percentages are graphed over time, as happens in Ngram Viewer, you get a userful snapshot of the term’s frequency in print as it went in and out of fashion.
Ngram Viewer would have helped the Downton Abbey people avoid some verbal gaffes — like “get shafted,” a phrase we are to believe Thomas the footman would have uttered in 1918. Computer says: No. Not before the 1960s.
You can trace several terms at once, as I did with “draw near” and “draw nigh,” to compare their fortunes over time. In publications from 1801, “draw near” was the clear favorite. Just as I suspected.
But one question still nagged me: Did I really want to use either of those phrases? They sounded so . . . prissy. I enlisted another cool Ngram Viewer feature: beneath the graph were links to the original publications, arranged by year, showing the context in which each phrase was used. Both terms, including the more popular “draw near,” were most common in fusty devotional texts: A Selection of Hymns from the Best Authors (1796), The Whole Works of the Late Rev. Mr. Ebenezer Erskine (1798), The Scotch Minister’s Assistant (1802). The little voice was right: “draw near” would have had an inch of dust on it even in 1801.
Would you like to know what my dowager did instead of draw nigh or near? She “trotted up the garden path,” of course.


Wow, what a great tool for historical accuracy of phrases. Cool stuff, Dad 🙂
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I often wonder how long a word has been around. Like QUIZ… I’ve heard legendary etymologies, most settling around 1880, usually involving bar bets… when, in fact, it was in widespread use in 1800. SHIT (the adolescent boy lives on) was barely used until the 1950s. OK burbled along for centuries. OKAY came into general usage around 1930 quickly surpassed OK around 1940 and never looked back. AOK has been around for hundreds of years with massive spikes in 1956 (cold war?) and 1983 (NASA-speak?).
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That’s interesting about QUIZ. Scatalogical references, though, seldom appeared in print before the second half of the 20th century, so I’m not sure how reliable a guide print sources would be to vernacular usage. I suspect humans have been potty-mouthed for as long as there have been potties, don’t you?
AOK points up another liability of Ngram Viewer: Google’s book databases are riddled with optical-character-recognition errors. If you check the ancient sources that supposedly contain AOK, you’ll find that they are mostly gibberish — probably a result of scanning done in haste. How much haste? So much haste that a technician’s hand, decked in pink finger-condoms, obscures one of the Contents pages of this 18th-century book:
https://books.google.com/books?id=rIUYt1HpRoEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=%22feminist%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CEcQ6AEwBzhGahUKEwjR2p2ln_nHAhXIMj4KHT6TBLg#v=onepage&q=feminist&f=false
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Another use for Ngrams: tracking malapropisms.
For instance: NO REST FOR THE WEARY and NO REST FOR THE WICKED have been duking it out for at least a couple hundred years. The bible thumpers put WICKED way ahead in 1850… of course, on-the-nose 20th century laxness allowed WEARY to wander ahead. They’re dead even present day.
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Looks like you weren’t getting much rest AT 1:30 AM
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I am very interested in the historical use of the F word. What do you think?
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Earliest recorded (i.e., written down) use was apparently in 1528, when an anonymous monk wrote in the margin of a book on moral conduct “O d fuckin abbot.” More here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/melissa-mohr/a-fcking-short-history-of_b_3352948.html
The “d” probably stood for something REALLY bad, like “damn.”
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