I recently read an article in which the word satisficing was used. The word intrigued me. According to the author, satisficing is a combination of sufficing and satisfying.
This led me to investigate if there were other words that were made by combining the sounds and meanings of two existing words. I learned that such a composite word is called a portmanteau. I also discovered that there are many portmanteaus that we use on a daily basis, frequently without realizing that’s what they are.
A portmanteau is typically defined as a large trunk or suitcase that opens into two equal parts. However, Lewis Carroll gave it a new meaning in his book, Through the Looking Glass, when he had Humpty Dumpty say: “Well, ‘slithy’ means “lithe and slimy” and ‘mimsy’ is “flimsy and miserable”. You see it’s like a portmanteau-there are two meanings packed up into one word.”
Some portmanteau words are very familiar and easy to deconstruct:
Backronym: back + acronym
Breathalyzer: breath + analyzer
Brexit: Britain + exit
Camcorder: camera + recorder
Caplet: capsule + tablet
Glamping: glamorous + camping
Infomercial: information + commercial
Infotainment: information + entertainment
Inscape: interior + landscape
Internet: international + network
Malware: malicious + software
Manscaping: man + landscaping
Meld: melt + weld
Motel: motor + hotel
Motorcycle: motorized + bicycle
Netflix: internet + flicks
Palimony: partner + alimony
Pluot: plum + apricot
Simulcast: simultaneous + broadcast
Sitcom: situational + comedy
Tween: teen + between
Wikipedia: wiki + encyclopedia
Some portmanteau words are unfamiliar, but they are still relatively easy to deconstruct:
Affluenza: affluent + influenza
Anticipointment: anticipation + disappointment
Prequiem: preemptive + requiem
Screenager: screen + teenager
Some words are very familiar, but their contributing terms may be surprising- at least, they surprised me. For example, I never knew that the word blog is composed of web and log.
Bit: binary + digit
Chortle: chuckle + snort
Cyborg: cybernetics + organism
Endorphin: endogenous + morphine
Fortnight: fourteen + nights
Gainsay: against + say
Garmin: Garry Burrell + Min Kao
Gerrymander: Gerry + salamander
Goodbye: God + be (with) + ye
Groupon: group + coupon
Hassle: haggle + tussle
Humongous: huge + monstrous
Ineptitude: inept + attitude
Microsoft: microcomputer + software
Modem: modulation + demodulation
Muppet: marionette + puppet
Pixel: picture + element
Prissy: prim + sissy
Skype: sky + peer-to-peer
Smog: smoke + fog
Taxicab: taximeter + cabriolet
Travelogue: travel + monologue
Vitamin: vita + amine
WiFi: wireless + fidelity
There were some words I’ve never seen before. For example, I live in Wisconsin, where we get a lot of snow and ice, and I’ve never heard this word used in any weather forecast, snice: snow and ice.
Ambigram: ambiguous + gram
Automagically: automatic + magically
Flexitarian: vegetarian + flexible
Mizzle: mist + drizzle
Sporgery: spam + forgery
Stagflation: stagnation + inflation
And some words seem like malapropisms when we hear them for the first time, but they are actually real words; for example, refudiate: repudiate + refute.
It really makes me wonder who originally coined these words, why they felt the need to create them, and how they were so darn clever!