it wasnt actually invented just like that but at some point in the late middle ages people quit saying & writing segde for some reason & started saying & writing said instead
telephone operators invented the word 'hello'.
It is often said that "Hello" was invented by Thomas Edison as way of greeting a caller on the telephone, invented around 1876. However, the Oxford English Dictionary records the first, verifiable use of the word in print to the US Telegraph (a periodical) in 1827. The word is thought to derive from an Old German word used to hail someone from a distance. It is also used in English to greet someone.
No one really knows who invented the word poop. It is just there like any other word.
"The word impossible is not in my dictionary" was said by Napoleon Bonaparte.
Year 1
the word test was invented back in 1234 when Richard Bangola said 'why don't we test this' the word came out of his mouth without him realising it.
It is often said that "Hello" was invented by Thomas Edison as way of greeting a caller on the telephone, invented around 1876.
One of his more obvious traits was to end virtually every sentence he said with the invented word bilongabong.
the way word human was invented evn the word dog was invented...nobody knows who invented it..
the word was invented in 1841
who invented the gasoline tractor? who invented the gasoline tractor?Hart parr company is said to have invented the word Tractor,,, the actual first usable farm tractors were made as early as the late 1800's in europe.
it was created in the 1504 when the British cam to the U.S.A in for war and a young lady went to say something else to a soldier and said nice and she said it meant pretty or beautiful
telephone operators invented the word 'hello'.
Charles Holland Duell
A newly invented word is a neologism.
It is often said that "Hello" was invented by Thomas Edison as way of greeting a caller on the telephone, invented around 1876. However, the Oxford English Dictionary records the first, verifiable use of the word in print to the US Telegraph (a periodical) in 1827. The word is thought to derive from an Old German word used to hail someone from a distance. It is also used in English to greet someone.
A new invented word or expression is called a Neologism.