Each week here at the Australian Writers’ Centre, we dissect and discuss, contort and retort, ask and gasp at the English language and all its rules, regulations and ridiculousness. It’s a celebration of language, masquerading as a passive-aggressive whinge about words and weirdness. This week, we’re having a spelling bee…
Q: Hello. H-E-L-L-O. Hello.
A: What are you doing?
Q: Practising for my upcoming ‘spelling bee’…
A: Um, okay.
Q: AWC. A-W-C. AWC.
A: Well, anyway, if you’re busy, we won’t distur–
Q: Oh, wait! I DO have a question for you!
A: You do? Great.
Q: WHY are they called spelling BEES? Why a bee?
A: That’s a pretty good question.
Q: Question. Q-U-E-S-T-I-O-N. Question.
A: Of course, they’re not the only kinds of bees out there.
Q: Do you mean “bumblebees”? The Airbus A380s of the insect world…
A: No, we meant there are other things like “working bees”, “gardening bees”, and so on.
Q: So there is. Well, can you explain them all then please? That would BEE great. B-E-E. Bee. Haha.
A: Alright, let’s take a look at the origins of “bee”.
Q: Oh yes, can we? Can we please?
A: Are you being sarcastic?
Q: I would never BEE such a thing!
A: Uh huh. Anyway, the word belonged solely to the insect for many centuries until the 1530s – when “bee” also came to mean “busy worker”. No prizes for guessing where that came from.
Q: Can we have just a small prize?
A: No prizes.
Q: Ugh, even the spelling bee is doing prizes!
A: No.
Q: Sheesh. Well, I’m assuming it’s because bees work busily all day collecting honey or making sweet love to flowers or whatever it is they actually do.
A: Yes, yes, all that. So that set the stage for busy workers to come together for the good of the community. This style of bee was first recorded in America in 1769 – a “spinning bee” – taking on both the labour and social activity similar to how bees behave.
Q: Oh BEE-have! Groovy!
A: Is that an outdated Austin Powers reference?
Q: Um, maybe.
A: Anyway, other types of “bee” followed in the early 1800s, including “husking bees”, “logging bees” and “raising bees” – that last one relating to raising building frames during construction. Many hands needed!
Q: Oh, like when the Amish built the barn in the 1985 film Witness starring Harrison Ford?
A: That’s an even more outdated film reference, but yes. And bees didn’t just stop there. In America, they even have records of “hanging bees” – for town lynchings.
Q: Lynching? Hmmm. Tricky to spell. Can you use it in a sentence?
A: A lynching usually didn’t involve a sentence.
Q: Oh, I see what you did there.
A: Thanks.
Q: So what other types of bee were there?
A: There was – and continues to be – no limit to the type of bee you can hold. A “sewing bee” or “quilting bee”; “baking bee”; “painting bee”. Simply put, a “bee” is a community social event with a common goal – one that typically encourages a hive of activity.
Q: Hive. Nice one. So, this is all fine and good…
A: But?
Q: But “Spelling Bee” feels like the odd one out. It’s a competition rather than building a barn, weeding a garden or a merry hanging. Do you see the difference?
A: The first spelling “matches” date back to 1808 – but they weren’t known as “bees” until around 1870. However, these were still highly popular events in the 1800s – a popular form of entertainment and social activity for a town.
Q: Much like a lynching?
A: Sadly, yes. Even more similar when that kid who knows the correct spelling leaves the audience hanging, right?
Q: I see what you did there.
A: Now, allow us to dispense with Theory B.
Q: Theory Bee?
A: That’s right – a second theory of where the term “bee” comes from. Recent etymologists have—
Q: Etymologists? They study insects like bees, yes?
A: No – that’s entomologists! Etymologists study the origin of words.
Q: Ah yes, sorry. Do continue.
A: Well, the second theory suggests that “bee” actually derives from the Middle English word “bene” – which meant “prayer” or “favour”. In England, voluntary help given by neighbours was known as a “bene” (pronounced “been”) – and this became shortened to “bee” through time and dialect differences.
Q: I think I prefer the other theory.
A: That’s okay. Just know that most modern dictionaries these days prefer the “bene” theory. Either way, the correct origin of “bee” is unlikely to bother most spelling connoisseurs.
Q: C-O-N-A-S-E-W-E-R-S. Nailed it!
Do you have a question you’d like us to explore? Email it to us today!