12 January 2013

Comments on the OED Definition


So, what does one learn from the definition of the Hun in the OED?

1. (a) They were one of an Asiatic race. However, no ethnicity is given. We do not know if they were Iranians, Indians, Turkic etc. Nor do we know if they were speaking an Indo-European language, an Altaic language etc. However, the etymology of the word is described as “believed to represent the native name of the people, who were known to the Chinese as Hiong-nu, and also Han.” Thus, they were not Chinese. The last part of this description is wrong, though, since they could have never been known to the Chinese as Han. The OED itself defines Han as “[d]esignating a Chinese dynasty (206 [BC] – 220 [AD]) marked by the introduction of Buddhism, the extension of Chinese rule over Mongolia, the revival of letters, and increase of wealth and culture.” That is, Han was a Chinese dynasty. They had nothing to do with the Hiong-nu.

(b) They were warlike, which, according to the OED, means “[n]aturally disposed to warfare or fighting; skilled in war, martial; courageous in war, valiant; fond of war, bellicose.”

(c) They were nomads, which, again according to the OED, designate persons “belonging to a race or tribe which moves from place to place to find pasture; hence, [persons] who live a roaming or wandering life.”

(d) They invaded Europe around 375 AD.

(e) In the middle of the 5th century, under Attila, they overran (= ran over [OED]) and ravaged (= devastated, laid waste, despoiled, plundered [OED]) a great part of Europe.

2. In the US, it once meant Hungarian in common or everyday speech. However, the latest example given is from 1890.

3. It also meant “[a] reckless or wilful destroyer of the beauties of nature or art: an uncultured devastator.” The last example is dated 1892. It seems to be synonymous with Goth and Vandal, since one is asked to consult to those articles.

One meaning of Goth in English, according to the OED, is “[o]ne who behaves like a barbarian, esp. in the destruction or neglect of works of art; a rude, uncivilized, or ignorant person; one devoid of culture and taste.” In addition, vandal means “[o]ne who acts like a Vandal or barbarian; a wilful or ignorant destroyer of anything beautiful, venerable, or worthy of preservation.”

Therefore, according to the Anglo-Saxon world, Germanic Goths and Vandals, and Huns whose ethnicity is not mentioned by the editors of the OED were barbarians, rude, uncivilized, ignorant, reckless or wilful destroyer of the beauties of nature or art, uncultured devastators.

4. The identification of Huns and Germanic peoples continues in the next definition. A Hun is meant to signify “a person of brutal conduct or character, ...” and during and since the World War I, “applied to the Germans (or their allies),” i.e., Turks and Bulgarians.

Now, for the first time the Hun and the Turk are associated albeit in a derogatory manner. But then there is a twist here. According to the OED, the source was the German emperor himself.

5. Strangely enough, in the same war, it was used as a slang word by the Air Force, for “a flying cadet,” and then evidently totally forgotten, because the last example is from 1925.

In short, the picture depicted by the Anglo-Saxon dictionary, published by the Oxford University Press since 1884, for a Hun is not a complimentary one. This, of course, reflects the attitude of the English-speaking world even though they may not use the word in a pejorative sense anymore just because of this so-called political correctness. The editors also confuse the Hun with the Han even though they describe the latter as “marked by… the revival of letters, and increase of wealth and culture.” On the other hand, they connect the Asian Huns with the European Huns interestingly.

First published: 12 January 2013.

OED Definition of the Hun


The Oxford English Dictionary definition of the Hun:

Hun, n.

(h
ʌn)

[OE.
Húne, Húnas, = ON. Húnar, MHG. Hünen, Hiunen, Ger. Hunnen, med.L. Hunni (Chunni, Chuni), believed to represent the native name of the people, who were known to the Chinese as Hiong-nu, and also Han.]

1. One of an Asiatic race of warlike nomads, who invaded Europe c
A.D. 375, and in the middle of the 5th c., under their famous king Attila (styled Flagellum Dei, the scourge of God), overran and ravaged a great part of this continent.

   a900
CYNEWULF Elene 21 (Gr.) Werod samnodan Huna leode and Hreðgotan, foron fyrdhwate Francan and Hunas.    Ibid. 32 Huna cyning.    1607 TOPSELL Four-f. Beasts (1658) 226 The Companies or Armies of Huns, wandering up and down with most swift Horses, filled all things with slaughter and terrour.    1728 POPE Dunciad III. 90 The North..Great nurse of Goths, of Alans, and of Huns.    1838 Penny Cycl. XII. 346/2 Under Heraclius [610–641] many of the Huns embraced Christianity. After that period their name is no longer mentioned in History.    1851 RUSKIN Stones Ven. I. i. (1874) 16 Like the Huns, as scourges only.

2. poet. (and in U.S. vulgarly) A Hungarian.

   1802
CAMPBELL Hohenlinden vi, Where furious Frank, and fiery Hun, Shout in their sulphurous canopy.    1890 Daily News 28 June 5/4 The Huns who are here [Pennsylvania] said to be creating a widespread dissatisfaction. They are engaged chiefly as labourers in the mines and ironworks.

3. transf. A reckless or wilful destroyer of the beauties of nature or art: an uncultured devastator: cf. ‘Goth’, ‘Vandal’.

   1806–7
J. BERESFORD Miseries Hum. Life (1826) VI. xxxii, Visiting an awful Ruin in the company of a Romp of one sex or a Hun of the other.    1892 Pall Mall G. 3 May 2/2 The marauding Huns whose delight it is to trample on flowers, burn the underwood, and kill the birds and beasts.

4. a. gen. A person of brutal conduct or character; esp. during and since the war of 1914–18 applied, often without animus, to the Germans (or their allies); a German. Also attrib.
   [
The immediate source of the application of Hun to the Germans was the speech delivered by Wilhelm II to the German troops about to sail for China on 27 July 1900. See the following examples:

   1900 Times 30 July 5/3 According to the Bremen Weser Zeitung the Emperor said [27 July at Bremerhaven]:—‘..No quarter will be given, no prisoners will be taken. Let all who fall into your hands be at your mercy. Just as the Huns a thousand years ago, under the leadership of Etzel (Attila) gained a reputation in virtue of which they still live in historical tradition, so may the name of Germany become known in such a manner in China that no Chinaman will ever again even dare to look askance at a German.’    1900 Daily News 20 Nov. 5/3 Herr Bebel [in the Reichstag] dwelt..at some length on the so-called Hun letters, and stigmatized the cruel and barbarous methods of European warfare in China.    1900 Times 21 Nov. 5/2 A great portion of the speech of the Socialist leader [Bebel] was devoted to the so-called ‘Letters from the Huns’ (Hunnenbriefe)—epistles from German soldiers in China to their relatives at home giving an account of the cruelties which have been perpetrated by the army of occupation.]

   1784–5 in Publ. Navy Rec. Soc. (1906) XXXI. 55 Andrew Duff, Midshipman. Dead. A drunken Hun.    1862
H. TIMROD Poems (1901) 143 Shout! let it reach the startled Huns! And roar with all thy festal guns! It is the answer of thy sons, Carolina!

   1902
KIPLING in Times 22 Dec. 9/5 In sight of Peace..With a cheated crew, to league anew With the Goth and the shameless Hun!    1914 ― in Queen 5 Sept. 388/2 Stand up and meet the war. The Hun is at the gate!    1915 E. CANDLER in Daily Mail 5 Apr. 4/3 She [sc. a Norfolk girl] told me how the eldest [brother ‘at the front’] had held up three ‘Huns’ in a mill... She used the word ‘Hun’ quite naturally, with no hint of contempt or bitterness.   1916 BOYD CABLE Action Front 133 Do you suppose our friend the Flighty Hun won't have a peep at us to-morrow morning?   1916 TAFFRAIL Pincher Martin xiv. 269, I suppose you know Peter,.. that we were bang on the top of a Hun minefield.    a1918 [see CRASH V. 6 a].    1918 Times 12 Dec. 9/4 ‘Supposed’ statements..of American ‘advisers’..simply smell of Hun propaganda.    1932 [see BIT n.2 4 h].    1941 [see crash-land V.].    1942 Tee Emm (Air Ministry) II. 63 The squadron has, after those months of inaction, started to bag Huns.    1945 [see ABROAD C n.].    1958 P. KEMP No Colours or Crest vi. 104 They ambushed a cartload of Huns the other day.

b. A flying cadet: see quots. Air Force slang (in the war of 1914–18).

   1916
H. BARBER Aeroplane Speaks 36 The Aeroplane..remonstrates... ‘See the Medical Officer, you young Hun.’    1918 E. M. ROBERTS Flying Fighter 233 An aeroplane..was flying over the street, but I don't know what the couple of British Huns in it were trying to do.    Ibid. 336 Every pilot is a Hun until he has received his wings.    1925 FRASER & GIBBONS Soldier & Sailor Words 123 The word ‘Hun’..was used..for a newly-joined young officer qualifying for his ‘wings’, in consequence of the destructive effect of the instructional aeroplanes which young officers while learning to fly usually had.

5. Comb., as Hun-folk, Hun-hater, Hun-land, Hun-talk; Hun-eating, -hunting, Hun-pinching.

   1928 Manch. Guardian Weekly 2 Nov. 350/2 There were two Englands—(a) the impossible Hun-eating England and (b) the better England.

   1923
KIPLING Irish Guards in Gt. War I. 343 The Battalion..watched about them..the muddy-faced Hun-folk.

   1920
R. MACAULAY Potterism II. i. 58 He would have to include among his jingoes and Hun-haters some fighting men too.    1925 FRASER & GIBBONS Soldier & Sailor Words 123 Hun hunting, an Airman's phrase for going out to look for, or chase, the enemy.

   1916 Daily Mirror 1 Nov. 4/4 Gott strafe England.., the recognised toast throughout Hunland.    1918 [see
EGG n. 3 d].    1920 Glasgow Herald 20 Nov. 5 No such sentiments could be admitted in Hunland.    1925 FRASER & GIBBONS Soldier & Sailor Words 124 Hunland, a term generally used in the War by Airmen for the country behind enemy lines, wherever it might be.

   1917
A. G. EMPEY Over Top 295 ‘Hun pinching’, raiding German trenches for prisoners.    1959 P. MOYES Dead Men don't Ski iii. 34 You ask her, Roger... You're the expert in Hun-talk.

Hence (esp. in sense 4)
ˈHundom, the state of being a ‘Hun’; ˈHunless a., lacking Germans, ˈHun-like a., like a Hun, impiously destructive; ˈHunnian, ˈHunnic, ˈHunnican, ˈHunnish adjs., of, pertaining to, or like the Huns; ˈHunnish a., whence ˈHunnishness.

   1607
TOPSELL Four-f. Beasts (1658) 226 These Hunnian horses elsewhere he calleth them Hunnican horses.    1820 BYRON Mar. Fal. IV. ii. 143 Dyed.. With Genoese, Saracen, and Hunnish gore.    1865 J. BALLANTINE Poems 139 A thousand Hun-like hands are On her Ark of glory.    1875 Encycl. Brit. III. 62/1 Attila is described as having been of true Hunnish type.    1882 Ibid. XIV. 60/1 A Hunnic party.    1916 F. LAWRENCE Mem. & Corr. (1961) 211, I saw you being martyred on account of my Hundom!    1918 Punch 27 Mar. 207/2 The Hunnish conduct of the German officer who egged on the natives.    1920 Blackw. Mag. Feb. 154/1 The islands were entirely Hunless.    1924 C. J. TOLLEY Mod. Golfer 7 The only piece of Hunnishness we ever encountered at Heidelberg was at the hands of an appalling doctor, who..thought fit to inoculate us against every known disease.    1928 Manch. Guardian Weekly 2 Nov. 350/2 Once give the better England clear evidence that Hunnishness is not the sole attribute of the German spirit, and [etc.].

Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition on CD-ROM (v. 4.0)
© Oxford University Press 2009
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First published: 29 October 2012.