Thanks for the opportunity. And sorry for the delay; I’ve been at work.
The example you tried to make, in the post I first replied to, wasn’t compelling, ar best, but for it to work at all, you have to show an etymological link between
diao, and “denominate/denomination”. I don’t have to show the opposite. But I think I can.
The first link, of *diao * with demon is speculative, not certain, as the CE article says (and
diabolus is an entirely different word). And for your point to be valid,
daemonium must have an invariably invidious meaning. As the CE article shows, it doesn’t. Both points mitigate against your metaphor. But most fatally, you have to show a etymological link between
daio/demon and denominate, not just a logical one, that of naming things after they are divided. And you can’t, as far as I know. The origin of “denomination” lies in the verb “to name”, as stated, and only begins with the same letter, (d), because the preposition (
de) does. It certainly refers to naming, in the case of a fraction, the naming of the number of parts into which the whole is divided, as the numerator gives the number of such parts in that particular fraction. But, like the term “denominate number”, the point is the name.
And I don’t necessarily disagree with your larger point. Just that you haven’t supported it by your post.
GKC
IanS:
I don’t disagree with you here. Once the whole has been broken apart it must be labeled, designated (denominated) or given a value. For instance, let’s say that the whole of all currency in the United States has the value 100,000,000,000. Once that whole has been broken apart (divided) each part must be given a denomination or value, $100, $50, $20, $5, $1.
de•nom•i•nate ( P ) Pronunciation Key (d-nm-nt)
tr.v. de•nom•i•nat•ed, de•nom•i•nat•ing, de•nom•i•nates
1.To issue or express in terms of a given monetary unit: securities that are denominated in dollars or yen.
2.To give a name to; designate.
You are going to have a hard time convincing me that there is no correlation between daio, denominator, denominate, and denomination.
I think we are getting way off subject here. So I’ll let you have the last word on this if you want.