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drpaladin

Posted

From Old High German widar (back or against) and sinnen (to travel).

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drpaladin

Posted

It also means left handed or wrong.

Oh, the indignities suffered on lefties in a right handed world.

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Bill W

Posted

1 hour ago, Myr said:

The word is old enough that people still thought the world was flat and didn't know about the Southern Hemisphere. 

Sure they did.  They knew about Africa, since they had to sail around it to get to the East Indies.  They just had a limited viewpoint where that was concerned.  

  • Like 4
Palantir

Posted

Yay! I used the meaning of 'widdershins' to create the title of my fantasy novel - 'Widderkin'. :thumbup:

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