So, etymology nerd Leigh has come to visit:
Sinestra is Latin for 'left', and it doesn't take much to see where our word 'sinister' comes from. In Latin dexter is 'right', and notably if you can do things well with both hands you're ambi-(both)-dextrous - two rights. Also dexterity means you're quite physically capable. Right handed bias is everywhere!
In French, 'gauche' is left, and in English we use 'gauche' to mean someone who is ill-mannered and unsophisticated. 'Droit' is their word for 'right,' the direction/side, but also the word for 'right,' as in human rights; in English we have the word 'adroit' to refer to someone skilled. You could say someone who's gauche is not socially adroit, I suppose, if that kind of thing made you chuckle, which it does, if you're me, which you're not. ...I think.
Lefties get it bad. Plus doorknobs and scissors and can openers... Generally not designed in their favour. I've tried opening a doorknob with my left hand to see if it was any different; indeed it's a bit of an annoyance.
Sinestra is Latin for 'left', and it doesn't take much to see where our word 'sinister' comes from. In Latin dexter is 'right', and notably if you can do things well with both hands you're ambi-(both)-dextrous - two rights. Also dexterity means you're quite physically capable. Right handed bias is everywhere!
In French, 'gauche' is left, and in English we use 'gauche' to mean someone who is ill-mannered and unsophisticated. 'Droit' is their word for 'right,' the direction/side, but also the word for 'right,' as in human rights; in English we have the word 'adroit' to refer to someone skilled. You could say someone who's gauche is not socially adroit, I suppose, if that kind of thing made you chuckle, which it does, if you're me, which you're not. ...I think.
Lefties get it bad. Plus doorknobs and scissors and can openers... Generally not designed in their favour. I've tried opening a doorknob with my left hand to see if it was any different; indeed it's a bit of an annoyance.