Discussions about eggcorns and related topics
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Thanks for your understanding.
Chris -- 2018-04-11
From the middle of the eighteenth century, the noun “accession” has been used to describe an item acquired by a library, museum, or depository. A verb was built from the noun in the nineteenth century that meant “to acquire for an archive.” More recently, the verb has become a trade term in the library business for acquiring and cataloging a book in the library system. A librarian might say “our staff accessioned thirty books today.”
Yesterday I heard someone talk about “ascensioning” an item. A plausible eggcorn, I think. “Ascension” means “rising up” and books are raised to catalog status through accessioning.
There are a number of examples on the web, including some in the negative form of “de-ascension [for deaccession]:”
Job description: “Ascensioning, barcoding, stamping, and shelving booksâ€
Art dealer description of goods: “…often are the result of collectors reselling a piece or a museum de-ascensioning something in their collection.â€
Description of picture of library shelves: “Ascensioned Slave Lake Newspapersâ€
Picture caption on arms forum: “This Saracen was part of the Morossini collection and de-ascensioned in the early 60’s.â€
Description of war club at museum gallery site: “Collected along with other tribal material that was de/ascensioned from an Indian museum in Ontario, Canada.â€
Hatching new language, one eggcorn at a time.
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