

Ironic uses of pretty to refer to something unpleasant are the origins of phrases like “pretty pass”, “pretty state of affairs” and “pretty kettle of fish” the latter more often found in the phrase “different kettle of fish”. This led to its use to describe someone attractive or good-looking – most commonly a woman or child, although the diarist Samuel Pepys refers to one Dr Clarke as a “very pretty man”.

This word is from Old English prættig, “cunning”, from præt “trick” – unrelated to prat “idiot”, which originally referred to the buttocks (hence pratfall: a fall onto the backside).īy the 15th century, pretty described something cleverly made, artful or ingenious. Here we apply the principle of earliest meaning to five common words and we get some rather unexpected results. While this may seem logical enough, in some cases it doesn’t quite work.

Fulsome can only mean “insincere” rather than “very full” they cry. Decimate must refer to the destruction of precisely one-tenth of something they protest. Disinterested doesn’t mean “not interested” but “impartial” they complain. Articles of this kind usually assert that a word’s correct meaning lies in its earliest uses, while later developments are corruptions.
