Submitted by OfficialWireGrind t3_zs48my in dataisbeautiful
OfficialWireGrind OP t1_j164b3w wrote
Reply to comment by Realistic_Turn2374 in [OC] English Words of Spanish Origin and the Number of Mentions in Wikipedia by OfficialWireGrind
Yes. This is true. Some words originated in another language, were then incorporated into Spanish, and then incorporated into English from Spanish.
Mick_86 t1_j16mfby wrote
Then they are not of Spanish origin.
OfficialWireGrind OP t1_j177wav wrote
Some people think eggs come from chickens. Others buy then from a grocery store.
RoastedRhino t1_j17rffd wrote
I doubt that the English language took platinum from Spanish, when it’s extremely common to take element names from Latin.
U5urPator t1_j18qhtn wrote
In this case it actually derives from Spanish. The Spanish first found the metal and called it "platina" in the 18th century. In the early 19th century they gave the metal its now latin sounding name.
You could also go back further in history and say that platina is a deriviation of the french word "plate".
RoastedRhino t1_j18tnsv wrote
I didn’t know! That’s interesting, thanks!
gleefulatheism56 t1_j1694sa wrote
Indeed, So true no doubt about it
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