Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Robin Hood was Clad in Green

Robin Hood was Clad in Green Robin Hood was Clad in Green Robin Hood was Clad in Green By Maeve Maddox The morning paper for me is always full of surprises that have nothing to do with the news. A recent eye-popper: Bill White, the mayor of Houston, cut a ribbon ahead of the public opening of the Beer Can House, a folk art monument that got its start when the late John Milkovisch began a 20-year task of cladding his house and workshop with thousands of maintenance-free flattened beer cans. Weve all heard the word clad. Old-fashioned novelists might tell us that the hero is clad in doublet and hose, that is, he was dressed in a close-fitting upper-body garment and long leg coverings. Ships can be said to be iron-clad: a timber under-structure has been covered with iron. The adjective ironclad can be used as a noun: The first battles between ironclads occurred during the U.S. Civil War. Figuratively we can speak of an iron-clad clause in a contract: the wording is so perfect, no one can wriggle out of it on a technicality. So where does the word clad come from? Clad is the old past form of the verb to clothe: Today I clothe my child in silk. Yesterday I clad my child in silk. I have clad my child in silk. I am clothing my child in silk. Mr. Milkovisch was clothing his house with beer cans. He was covering his house with beer cans. To say that he was cladding his house with beer cans is to create a new verb, the forms of which would be: infinitive: to clad simple past: clad past participle: have clad present participle: cladding. Such a creation is not without precedent. It is a kind of back formation, like taking the singular noun pease and creating a new singular, pea, which then has the plural peas. What do you want to bet that clad as a present tense verb catches on? Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Misused Words category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:Masters Degree or Master's Degree?Comma Before ButWhen Is a Question Not a Question?

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