Alligatorob
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Did you know you can be ruthful? Its an older word than ruthless.
Ruthful, meaning merciful or full of sorrow, can be found back to the 13th century in English. Ruthless, meaning having no compassion or pity, goes back to the 14th century.
Interestingly, the word "ruth" is related to the very old Germanic verb "rue."
Rue means to affect with sorrow or to grieve. It's been used in different ways throughout the centuries, but generally when we hear it today, it has to do with looking back on something with regret. For example, "I rue the day Cousin Oliver showed up on the Brady Bunch."
Shark jumping aside, if you take "rue" and tack on the suffix "th," you get ruth. In this case, the suffix is the same one we see in other verbs that have been transformed into nouns -- including growth, health, and truth.
So, that's how we get ruth -- a noun meaning mercy or sorrow. From there, tack on a couple more suffixes, and we get ruthless, meaning without compassion or mercy, and the long forgotten ruthful which means to be filled with compassion or pity.
https://www.michiganradio.org/arts-culture/2017-09-03/heres-some-ruth-for-the-ruthless
Ruthful, meaning merciful or full of sorrow, can be found back to the 13th century in English. Ruthless, meaning having no compassion or pity, goes back to the 14th century.
Interestingly, the word "ruth" is related to the very old Germanic verb "rue."
Rue means to affect with sorrow or to grieve. It's been used in different ways throughout the centuries, but generally when we hear it today, it has to do with looking back on something with regret. For example, "I rue the day Cousin Oliver showed up on the Brady Bunch."
Shark jumping aside, if you take "rue" and tack on the suffix "th," you get ruth. In this case, the suffix is the same one we see in other verbs that have been transformed into nouns -- including growth, health, and truth.
So, that's how we get ruth -- a noun meaning mercy or sorrow. From there, tack on a couple more suffixes, and we get ruthless, meaning without compassion or mercy, and the long forgotten ruthful which means to be filled with compassion or pity.
https://www.michiganradio.org/arts-culture/2017-09-03/heres-some-ruth-for-the-ruthless