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| Posts: 13061 | Location: 6 miles west of Wigan UK | Registered: 06-05-02 |    |
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Gold Enthusiast

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Bedstor, I think Ian Rankin named his character, Rebus, after the puzzle: bookreporter. I was a student of English Literature when I wrote the first Rebus book, KNOTS AND CROSSES, and I was studying deconstruction, semiotics, etc. A rebus is a picture puzzle, and it seemed to click. After all, we already had Inspector Morse (a type of code), and in the first book Rebus was being sent picture puzzles to solve... so I made him Rebus, thinking it was only for one book (I never intended turning him into a series) so it didn't matter if I gave him a strange name. Recently, I bumped into a guy called Rebus in my local pub. He lives in Rankin Drive in Edinburgh. Truth is always stranger than fiction...
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| Posts: 2379 | Location: Ontario, Canada | Registered: 10-27-06 |    |
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Gold Enthusiast

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quote: I seriously doubt that the English word was coined anywhere but England in 1600.
I'm sure you are right. However, Bedstor thanks us for a 'new word.' If this is the first time he has heard the word used in the context of a puzzle, then it's a new word to him. Don't you agree? (PS: I think Alexander the Great used it first, anyway  )
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| Posts: 2379 | Location: Ontario, Canada | Registered: 10-27-06 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast

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quote: Originally posted by DorianGreyed: I seriously doubt that the English word was coined anywhere but England in 1600.
The Oxford Dictionary gives 'rebus' as originating in Picardy in the C16. Then it referred to satirical pieces containing riddles in picture form. It comes from de rebus quae geruntur the Latin for 'concerning (the) things that are taking place'.It came to refer to any representation of a word or phrase by pictures, symbols, arrangement of letters etc which suggest the word or phrase, or the syllables of which it is made up , specifically a device, often of heraldic appearance, suggesting the name of the bearer. It first occurs in English in the early C17. Dingbat is a 'new' word, referring to a particular kind of rebus puzzle.It is the name given to it by one of our national newspapers.(Don't recall seeing one so named before about 1970). In my schooldays we called such a puzzle a 'rebus'.  Happy New Year! (75 minutes or so away in Britain)
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| Posts: 8032 | Location: Newmarket, UK/ Antibes, S.France | Registered: 07-14-02 |    |
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