| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 260.1 | answer? | IOSG::DAVEY |  | Thu Oct 16 1986 15:53 | 13 | 
|  |     		
       	a     All I know is it's supposed to have some magical (the dictionary
       abr    says "cabalistic") powers when it's written like a triangle
      abrac   <-.
     abracad     Otherwise, the dictionary just says "Latin, from Greek"
    abracadac      - as the Greeks don't use our alphabet  I wonder
   abracadabra         whether it does come from A B C D.
    
    Any magicians (black or white) out there?
    
                               
    john 
    
 | 
| 260.2 | .2 Is On The Right Track | INK::KALLIS |  | Thu Oct 16 1986 16:16 | 24 | 
|  |     This really belongs in DEJAVU.  However,
    
    Abracadabra was originally a magical cure word first mentioned by
    Quintus Serenus Sammonicus, a doctor who accompanied the Roman emperor,
    Severus, when he was on expedition to Britain in AD 208.
    
    It was a fever cure, and was supposed to be written on a piece of
    paper that was to be hung on a patient's neck.  The triangle aspect
    is correct, but the triangle is inverted:
    
    
                           ABRACADABRA
                            BRACADABR
                             RACADAB
                              ACADA
                               CAD
                                A
    
    The fever was supposed to dwindle away, as the word did. Nobody
    is quite sure where it originated, though ancient healing prayers
    might have been the root.
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
    
 | 
| 260.3 | ... continuing ad hoc | 4GL::LASHER | Working... | Fri Dec 05 1986 18:40 | 1 | 
|  |     Ok, so where did "hocus pocus" come from?
 | 
| 260.4 | I think this has been answered before, but... | DRAGON::MCVAY | Pete McVay, VRO (Telecomm) | Fri Dec 05 1986 21:24 | 8 | 
|  |     It came from the words of the Mass, "Hoc et Corpus est" (Here is
    the body of Christ.), spoken by the pirest as he raised the Host.
    Since bells were tinkled and incense was frequently loosed at this
    point, the masses weren't sure what was going on, but they knew
    it was important.  Travelling magicians, tumblers, and clowns at
    Faires used the words when performing magic tricks.  Since nobody
    spoke Latin very well, including the priests, the words got mangled
    to "hocus pocus."
 |