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It is now common knowledge (hat tip to the Internet) that President Donald Trump's ancestral family name was Drumpf, a presumably respectable German surname that sounds, unfortunately — to English speakers' ears, at any rate — like a sack of potatoes hitting the bed of a donkey cart. At some point (a century, or two, or perhaps three ago; the exact timing of it remains unclear), a forebear shortened the family name to Trump: a good move, Donald Trump noted in 2004, since Drumpf Tower doesn't sound nearly as catchy. During the early months of Trump's presidential campaign in 2015, naysayers deployed Drumpf to great effect as a put-down, sometimes even alleging (falsely) that Drumpf, not Trump, was the candidate's real name. It was around the same time that Trump antagonists caught on to another peculiarity of the President-to-be's surname, which is that it can be passed off as the root of the English noun trumpery, which has been in use since the 1400s and is rife with derogatory connotations. You can imagine these people's delight to discover, for example, that the current edition of Merriam-Webster defines trumpery as worthless nonsense, or a collection of trivial but useless articles. And that's just for starters: The Oxford English Dictionary, as historian Simon Schama noted in November 2015, defines trumpery thusly: Nor is this a new usage. The 1780 edition of Thomas Sheridan's General Dictionary of the English Language yields a very similar definition: The list of synonyms for trumpery leaves nothing to the imagination: To be absolutely clear, however, apart from their being partial homonyms, the proper name Trump, which is a simplification of Drumpf, a surname of German origin, is not linguistically related to trumpery, the root of which is French, and originally meant to deceive. The Merriam-Webster web site explains: Not to put too fine a point on it, but anyone who tries to convince you that there is anything deeper than a rhetorical connection between Trump, trump up, and trumpery is engaging in a boldfaced example of the latter. Feel free to call them on it.
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