Attercop
English Noun - A Spider.
"Old fat spider spinning in a tree! Old fat spider can’t see me! Attercop! Attercop! Won't you stop, Stop your spinning and look for me?" - from The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien.
Attercop comes through the Middle English attercoppe, from Old English átorcoppe, a combination of the elements átor for 'poison', and coppe (alternatively cobbe), an indistinct morpheme referring to round things (compare 'cup' and 'cob', and the German 'Kopf'). A vestige of the word is still to be found in the word "cobweb" (from Middle English coppeweb) still in regular use today. A similar word from the Old English, but which does not come down to modern usage, is the variant átorloppe, which includes rather the element loppe meaning spider (alternatively lobbe, thus also Tolkien's use of "lazy lob"). Cognates for attercop exist in other languages related to English, such as the Danish and Norwegian "edderkopp" and the dialectical Swedish "etterkoppa", both meaning spider.
To round things out a bit, the etymology of "spider" is somewhat more direct, coming through the Middle English spiþer or spydyr from the Old English spíþra meaning "the thing that spins (i.e. a web)".

















