Wordfoolery logo - a black and white jester hat with bells on an orange background
6) The Dundee hecklers were mostly female and also led the charge in the suffragette movement. I love that the first heckler was a Dundee woman sticking up for her employment rights.
If you liked this story, maybe check out my weekly blog about word histories - wordfoolery.wordpress.com
07.03.2026 18:40
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5) The Scottish town of Dundee became known for their hecklers who dictated wages and working conditions through strength of numbers and shouting. When others followed them the heckling shop became known as a centre for activism. The term moved into the world of politics and later comedy stand-up.
07.03.2026 18:40
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4) Shortly after the arrival of the comb we were using heckle as a verb, meaning to comb flax or hemp with a heckle. By the mid 1400s we had heckler as a noun for somebody who uses a heckle. The work was done by men and women.
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3) The first use of heckle in English dates to 1300 when it was a flax comb and was spelled hechel probably from a Germanic source relating to hooks and teeth.
Flax fibres give us linen yarn and fabric. Like wool, flax fibres need to be combed out before spinning, hence the heckle comb.
07.03.2026 18:40
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2) The two areas where hecklers are most common today are at comedy gigs and political events. It can be witty or angry, but either way itβs not easy to deal with a heckler and the word originated with a comb and a woman.
07.03.2026 18:40
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two muppets are sitting in front of a red curtain .
ALT: two muppets are sitting in front of a red curtain .
Day 7 of Female Words for #WomensHistoryMonth - heckler and this is one of my favourite female words and one of my favourite etymologies I've ever investigated. #celebratingwomen #etymologyπ§΅ #comedy
07.03.2026 18:40
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How to Get Your Name in the Dictionary by Grace Tierney - out now in paperback and ebook, orange cover
5) Curieβs papers, even her cookbook, from the 1890s are so contaminated by radioactivity that they are stored in lead boxes and require specialist clothing to be viewed.
Interested in the fascinating people behind eponyms? Check out "How to Get Your Name in the Dictionary" amzn.to/2ygxZMH
06.03.2026 15:48
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4) When Pierre died in 1906, Marie continued their work, becoming the first female professor at the University of Paris. She died many years later due to exposure to radium.
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an x-ray of a hand with the website weissortho.com
ALT: an x-ray of a hand with the website weissortho.com
3) She coined the term radioactivity, developed techniques to isolate radioactive isotopes, and discovered two elements β polonium and radium. Curium is also named for her. She created and ran x-ray units in field hospitals in World War I.
06.03.2026 15:48
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2) Curie was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first and only to win twice, and the only person to win in two sciences (physics 1903, chemistry 1911). She won for physics jointly with her husband and Henri Becquerel after Pierre insisted her work be recognised too.
06.03.2026 15:48
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Polonium on the periodic table of elements - one of those discovered by Marie Curie. Symbol is Po.
Day 6 of Female Words for #WomensHistoryMonth - curie. The curie is a unit of radioactivity and it is named for Marie Sklodowska Curie (1867-1934). #celebratingwomen #etymology π§΅
06.03.2026 15:48
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5) Not content with a hectic scientific career she also learned how to make musical instruments. She was a talented chamber quartet musician. She was an enthusiastic fly-fisherwoman and learned how to fly a plane with the aim of flying under the George Washington bridge in New York.
05.03.2026 11:52
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4) She became the first female full professor at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. In 1959 she earned her masters in public health from John Hopkins and devoted the rest of her career to preventing birth defects through education and fundraising for research.
05.03.2026 11:52
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3) After resistance it was adopted for use at one minute after birth and again at five minutes - saving countless newborns.
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2) Apgar specialised in anesthesia at a time when it was barely respected and low paid. When she studied the effects of anesthesia on mothers in labour she created a standard method to assess the newborn on heart rate, respiratory effort, muscle tone, reflex response, and colour - the Apgar Score.
05.03.2026 11:52
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a cartoon baby with a pacifier in his mouth is sitting down .
ALT: a cartoon baby with a pacifier in his mouth is sitting down .
Day 5 of Female Words for #WomensHistoryMonth - apgar. The apgar score was invented by Dr. Virginia Apgar (1909-1974) in 1952. #celebratingwomen #etymology π§΅
05.03.2026 11:52
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An original mixed media artwork of a hare with barley and a harvest moon. Created on mulberry paper, using acrylic paints and copper leaf.
The Corn Mother is a widespread mythological figure across folklore, representing agriculture, fertility, and the cycle of crops. She often appears as a nurturing figure who sacrifices herselfβthrough burning or being banishedβto bring food, such as corn or grain, to humanity.
#BookologyThursday
05.03.2026 08:20
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5) Montessori had only one child, a son, with a fellow doctor. If she had married she would have had to stop working so they kept their relationship secret. Her son later helped her with her research. #celebratingwomen
04.03.2026 12:13
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4) When she was studying for her medical degree it was deemed inappropriate for her to do human anatomy dissections in the presence of her all-male classmates. She had to do hers alone, after hours. She took up tobacco smoking to mask the smell of formaldehyde.
04.03.2026 12:13
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3) Her first class, for slum children in Florence, had 50-60 pupils aged 3-6. She gave the children fun puzzles, everyday tasks, and interesting activities within a room with child-sized furniture. She refined her methods for the rest of her life working around the world.
04.03.2026 12:13
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2) Maria Montessori came from a noble family. First working with special needs children and later opening schools for all children using her teaching principles of sensory materials and learning through play. #etymology
04.03.2026 12:13
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Day 4 of Female Words for #WomensHistoryMonth - montessori.
Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952) an Italian doctor and educator. She was the first woman to qualify with a degree in medicine, in 1896, from the University of Rome, although her father disagreed with her decision to pursue her education. π§΅
04.03.2026 12:13
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Josephine Garis Cochrane (1839 β 1913) was an American inventor. She was the inventor and manufacturer of the first successful hand-powered dishwasher. #CelebratingWomen
04.03.2026 10:31
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The Librarian's Secret Diary
<p>Nina is the new librarian on the block. Sheβs learning the shelves with her buzzword-spouting boss and the senior librarian who hates reading and canβt wait to retire. She records the crazy reader ...
The latest episode of my serialised librarian story is now live. This week Nina hosts an author event and ponders the obligatory "men without shirts" on romance novel covers. Subscribe to read all episodes at channillo.com/series/the-l... #irishfiction #serial #librarylife
04.03.2026 10:04
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2) ... because in the London stage version the heroine, Trilby OβFerrall, wore such a hat. Her character is a half-Irish girl working as model and laundress in Paris.
The popularity of the hat soared until the 1960s when the lower head clearance in motor-cars resulted in fewer hats being worn.
03.03.2026 17:35
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a black and white photo of a man wearing a hat and plaid shirt
ALT: a black and white photo of a man wearing a hat and plaid shirt
Day 3 of Female Words for #WomensHistoryMonth - trilby.
A soft felt, narrow-brimmed hat with an indented crown. It gets its name from the dramatised version of βTrilbyβ a hugely popular novel published in 1894 by George du Maurier (1834-1896 and Daphne du Maurier's grandfather) #etymology π§΅
03.03.2026 17:35
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Four Wordfoolery books with wrapping bits and bobs - Words the Vikings Gave Us, How to Get your Name in the Dictionary (eponyms), Words the Sea Gave Us, Words Christmas Gave Us - all by Grace Tierney
Annual reminder - #MothersDay (Ireland, UK etc) 15th of March and my books are easy to wrap. Also, many mothers enjoy #etymology, social history, folklore, pirate yarns, romantic vikings and all of those are in the books. All the places to find them are listed at wordfoolery.wordpress.com/my-books/
03.03.2026 12:52
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