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The series includes commentary from etymologists, historians, and pop culture figures — including a handful of comedians who take great pleasure in using the words in question (and more) with as much imaginative force as possible.—Will Harris, EW.com, 3 Aug. 2025 Culture Glamour spoke with the internet’s favorite etymologist about how the controversial and divisive word became cool.—Sam Reed, Glamour, 15 Apr. 2025 Interestingly, etymologists disagree about whether gumbo gets its name from kombo (the Choctaw word for filé) or gombo (the word for okra in several West African languages).—Leslie Brenner, Dallas News, 30 Mar. 2023 In a series of essays written for The New England Journal of Medicine between 1971 and 1973, Thomas, a physician, an immunology researcher, and an etymologist, takes a wide-ranging, poetic look at biology.—The Editors, Outside Online, 22 Apr. 2020 The job entailed his becoming an etymologist, lexicographer and field worker generally among the native speakers in his own country.—Joseph Epstein, WSJ, 10 Aug. 2018 Though Porter frequently gets the credit, etymologist Barry Popik has also claimed that the phrase was used to refer to the state high school basketball tournament in Indiana even earlier, at least as early as 1931.—Olivia B. Waxman, Time, 12 Mar. 2018 The phrase casting couch became linked to the Shuberts, at least in retrospect, as the etymologist Peter Tamony discovered.—Ben Zimmer, The Atlantic, 16 Oct. 2017
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