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Useless Factslanguage

The word 'muscle' comes from the Latin for 'little mouse'

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The Latin word 'musculus' means 'little mouse'. Ancient Romans noticed that when a muscle flexed beneath the skin — particularly the bicep — it looked like a small mouse moving under a blanket. The same root gives us 'mussel' (the shellfish), because its shell resembles a mouse. English inherited the word through French, and both the anatomical and culinary meanings survived.

Why this is surprising

It's startling that every time you say 'muscle', you're actually saying 'little mouse' — a 2,000-year-old observation still embedded in language.

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The word 'muscle' comes from Latin 'musculus' meaning 'little mouse' — Romans thought flexing muscles looked like mice moving under skin. 💪🐭 #OddlyHuman