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Mar 13, 2026
This week’s themeToponyms This week’s words Babylonian Laodiceanism gasconader bantam
Ty Cobb, Bantam Weight, 1910
Image: The Met
Banten in Indonesia
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with Anu Gargbantam
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
After Bantam, the former English name of Banten in Java, Indonesia,
a port associated in English etymology with the importation of small
fowl. Earliest documented use: 1749.
NOTES:
Banten is both a province and a city in Java. It’s the same Java
that gave us another toponym: java, as in coffee. In combat sports and weightlifting, bantamweight is an official weight class, named after bantam chickens. The name comes from Bantam, but many bantam breeds are from elsewhere (for example, the Japanese Bantam/Chabo is a distinct breed with its own history). Misnaming via travel and trade is a recurring theme in English. See turkey. USAGE:
“He had a tough bantam body, easily detectable under the tight sweat
shirt he wore.” John Knowles; A Separate Peace; Secker & Warburg; 1959. See more usage examples of bantam in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Don't ask me who's influenced me. A lion is made up of the lambs he's
digested, and I've been reading all my life. -Giorgos Seferis, writer,
diplomat, Nobel laureate (13 Mar 1900-1971)
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