Guest guest Posted September 29, 2005 Report Share Posted September 29, 2005 I received a personal message from Jeanne Rose where she asked me to post this response to the list about the topic that involved her and the word hydrosol ... In all fairness to her I have decided to post it as she requested. *Smile* Chris (list mom) LAST DAYS of the Vanilla Bean Blow Out & Cranberry and Raspberry Seed Oils Buy http://www.aftertherayne.com/supplies.htm Think left and think right and think low and think high. Oh, the thinks you can think up if only you try! - Dr Seuss http://www.alittleolfactory.com Jeanne Rose The Use of the word Hydrosol Two weeks ago on September 16-18, 2005, I taught an aromatherapy seminar in Michigan. It was called Aromatherapy Certification Level 1. In that class, I had many fine students. However, one of them decided to gossip about me and be quite ridiculing on a in regards to my claim that I " invented the word hydrosol " . Since this person did not get the name of the weekend correct, nor did she know the correct name of my home-study course in which she claims to be enrolled [Aromatherapy Studies Course]; I am not surprised that she also got it wrong regarding my statements on the word " hydrosol " . So she got it wrong three out of three times. So I will say it again, " to my knowledge I am the first person to ever use the word hydrosol for the waters of distillation " . Before 1989, this word was only in use in technology or engineering. Of course, I looked it up in a dictionary. I also had the website http://www.hydrosols.net for a few years and knew when you googled up " hydrosol " you actually got a chemical technology company. I am a great fan of the dictionary and own six different types of dictionary. In my copy of the Oxford English Dictionary, which is a major diachronic dictionary, meaning that it is a historical dictionary, that traces both definition and usage of words. I am now quoting directly from this dictionary, " hydrosol is a sol in which the liquid constituent is water: First used in 1864 in Indus. & Engin Chemical News on 10 Mar 104 " and " gold hydrosols nearly always contain unreduced gold compounds, etc. from 1954 Rock & Min Deposits " and " In mineralogy the hydrosols are almost the only sols of any importance " . So of course, I know that the word has been in existence since at least 1864 BUT NOT in the context of describing the waters of distillation. For heaven's sake, I work in aromatherapy not mineralogy. I do claim to have invented the word for " the waters of distillation " . Maybe the word invented is too strong for people but it does mean, " create, produce, and imagine for the 1st time " . It seems like a fine word to me. In any case, if someone other than me " imagined, invented, used " the word hydrosol for the waters of distillation before I did, I would like to know. I would like to acknowledge and honor that person. So to whomever, wrote the ridiculing e-mail about me, you should pay better attention in class. Jeanne Rose Reference below: Tue, 09 Dec 2003 22:19:26 -0800 Hydrosols ** Origin of the Term > I'm currently taking Jeanne Rose's aromatherapy correspondence course > and just recently attended her " Vocabulary of Scent " weekend > intensive. She does, indeed, claim to have " invented " the term > hydrosol. Came from her own two lips. > Interesting to finally meet her in person, to say the least. Not > exactly what I was expecting. I enjoyed the workshop and I AM > learning, but she's not the easiest instructor I've ever had . Here is the complete and original quote from J. Rose at http://www.aromaticplantproject.com . . . " Hydro means water and 'sol' means solution. Thus, the word hydrosol means the watery solution of distillation that contains both water-soluble plant components and micro-drops of essential oil . . . the " hydrosol " . Here is the complete and original quote from Jeanne Rose, Aromatherapy Course - Home & Family. " What are Hydrosols? Jeanne Rose coined the name Hydrosol, for the aromatic distillate as a name for the waters of distillation, in 1989. It is the pure, natural, 100% non-alcoholic distillate produced during the distillation process; the process also extracts the essential oils. [the word hydrosol itself was first used in print in 1864]. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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