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#134157 10/20/04 12:38 PM
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oooh, that's good, eta.

Reminds me of ghoti


#134158 10/20/04 12:41 PM
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I've always sorta said it /də'gɑjɣ/ in me noggin.


#134159 10/20/04 12:44 PM
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ghoti

I've always pronounced this as shavian. But, in fact, it's the third person singular present indicative of the Sanskrit verb √ghu 'to skeedaddle'.


#134160 10/20/04 12:52 PM
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now, don't go piscine somebody off...



formerly known as etaoin...
#134161 10/20/04 12:58 PM
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piscine

One man's mead is another one's poisson. Sorry, my intention was not to anger anybody ...


#134162 10/20/04 01:08 PM
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poisson
clever angle...



formerly known as etaoin...
#134163 10/20/04 01:40 PM
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AnnaStrophic,

Faldage is right: "J.", based on Shaw's ghoti idea. Dge from "edge" and -eigh from "sleigh". I forget the linguistic term for it, but instead of spelling it Dgeeigh, I dropped one of the Es and shortened it to Dgeigh.

It has been bothering me though. What is the linguistic term for dropping a duplicated letter in such a context?



#134164 10/20/04 02:09 PM
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It has been bothering me though. As well it should--have you no conscience, man? I've known the pronunciation for a while now: I had inside info.


#134165 10/20/04 03:11 PM
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Apocope?


#134166 10/20/04 03:56 PM
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I looked up apocope on the web and found that it is the omission of a letter or syllable at the end of a word. So apocope wouldn’t be quite right. Syncope, which is the omission of letters or syllables from the middle of a word, would be technically correct, but I was thinking about a term that dealt more with vowels and how some vowels were dropped from some words in their journeys from Old English to Middle English and Middle English to Modern English. Unfortunately, I think the term I’m looking for is in the one book I sold back to the book store in college


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