LexBrew
Vol. 17 · Portmanteaus200 coinages

Two words, packed into one.

Chortle = chuckle + snort. Brunch = breakfast + lunch. Lewis Carroll named the technique in 1871, using Humpty Dumpty to explain that *slithy* meant "lithe and slimy, like clothes in a portmanteau." The coinages here all stuck — each with a date, a coiner, and the two words it compressed.

The Victorian portmanteau

Lewis Carroll didn't invent portmanteau-making, but he named the technique and demonstrated it with enough flair that the word-class is often traced to him. Two of the words here are direct Carroll coinages.

Early 20th century

Industrialisation generated new things that needed new names, fast. Motoring, electricity, telecommunications, and urban pollution all produced portmanteaus within a generation of their arrival.

Mid-century: TV and science

Two engines dominated: television (sitcom, televangelist) and post-war big science (pulsar, transistor). Many mid-century coinages came from scientific style sheets and industry journals.

Late 20th century

Marketing, media, and the early internet. Infomercial, emoticon, workaholic — the coinages name phenomena of mass media and white-collar life. Several predate the decades they're associated with.

Contemporary (2000–)

Faster coinage, faster canonisation. Brexit and podcast both reached the OED within a decade of first use — historically rapid. Social media has made visibility, not invention, the rate-limiting step.

More on where words come from.

The loanwords shelf traces borrowings. The semantic-shift shelf traces words that kept the spelling and changed the meaning.

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