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#18588 02/08/2001 10:15 AM
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Anyone know how it came to be pronounced as 'Seltic' in the U.S.?


#18589 02/08/2001 12:19 PM
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Strange, ain't it. The Glasgow football team that is associated with sectarian violence vis-a-vis Rangers is also pronounced in the same fashion.

But I have no idea why, I have to admit.


#18590 02/08/2001 1:18 PM
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It's from the tendency for C to be pronounced s before e or i. With the rise in popularity of celtic music (pronounced keltic) it's normally only heard in the name of the Boston basketball team.


#18591 02/08/2001 1:19 PM
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In our (united statsians) own defense, only sports fans pronounce it seltic, and then only when refering to sports teams. (is it basket ball? i don't follow sports much) There was a movie out some time ago called "celtic pride". I was quite confused when, after having seen the name printed, I heard someone refer to 'seltic pride.'


#18592 02/08/2001 3:45 PM
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I always found it amusing that in Boston, where so much of the population is from Celtic roots, nearly everyone mispronounces the word due to the name of the basketball team. Not sure how the team's name came to be pronounced that way, but I'd have to go with Faldage's theory, and figure that the average Boston hoops fan (among which I counted myself, for some time) just didn't know any better.

I once played on a soccer team in Boston known as the Celtics, and we had frequent debates about how to pronounce the name of the team.


#18593 02/08/2001 6:54 PM
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) it's normally only heard in the name of the Boston basketball team.

Or, as has been mentioned, in the name of one half of the sporting/sectarian feud in Glasgow, Jimmy. Where I live, one hears of Glasgow Seltic much more often than one hears of the Boston Seltics.


#18594 02/08/2001 7:33 PM
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by's original question: pronounced as 'Seltic' in the U.S.?

MaxQ notes: Where I live, one hears of Glasgow Seltic much more often than one hears of the Boston Seltics.

US'ns mostly never hearn of no Glasgow Seltic. Maybe in Glasgow, KY. You ever get down there, Jackie?


#18595 02/09/2001 2:07 PM
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I was under the impression that the 's' pronunciation was standard in the U.S., though now that it's been mentioned I remember the Glasgow Celtics. I read that the 'sel'tik' pronunciation comes from the French once. I know Celtic can also be spelt Keltic; this might save some trouble. Really odd how the 's' stuck with the sports team, isn't it!


#18596 02/09/2001 2:18 PM
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kriegführendjugend states: I was under the impression that the 's' pronunciation was standard in the U.S.

It was standard not so many years ago*. The popularity of Keltic music put paid to that.

*One of the three signs of old age is thinking it wasn't that many years ago.


#18597 02/09/2001 2:27 PM
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One of the three signs of old age is thinking it wasn't that many years ago.

Guess that makes us forever young!
wow



#18598 02/09/2001 5:26 PM
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US'ns mostly never hearn of no Glasgow Seltic. Maybe in Glasgow, KY. You ever get down there, Jackie?

Why yes, the Glasgow Seltics are famous state-wide. They're
a high-school skittles team. Since this is not a very
well-known sport, they decided they'd better do something
to make themselves better known, so they began wearing
Celtic costumes to the matches. Usually unnerved the other teams, too.


*One of the three signs of old age is thinking it wasn't that many years ago.
What are the other two, Sweetie, just so I'll know what else to watch out for?




#18599 02/09/2001 6:35 PM
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In the "arty" design world it is spelled celtic, but always pronounced keltic. Not being into sports, I had never realized that the Seltics was spelled with a "C".


#18600 02/09/2001 7:39 PM
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Faldage said : *One of the three signs of old age is thinking it wasn't that many years ago.Then Jackie asked What are the other two, Sweetie, just so I'll know what else to watch out for?

As I wrote in a private message to Faldage :
First you lose your hair color (the natural color that is)
Second you lose your figure
Then you can't remember why they were so important.
wow




#18601 02/11/2001 11:37 PM
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I read that the 'sel'tik' pronunciation comes from the French once

hmmm, maybe you're right about that BY. A "C" in front of an "E" is pronounced like an "S" in French. But it seems odd that the U.S. would have adopted this pronunciation from the French.


#18602 02/12/2001 2:46 AM
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okay, here's the shock of the day: OED gives the seltic pronunciation first, coming from French or(?) Latin.

("sEltIk, "kEltIk) [a. F. celtique or ad. L. celtic-us of the Celts.]


#18603 02/12/2001 10:50 AM
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OED gives the seltic pronunciation first

... confirming the classical bias tendency in so much of our cultural institutions founded on 18th & 19th c. values...?


#18604 02/12/2001 11:51 AM
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One of the three signs of old age is thinking it wasn't that many years ago.
What are the other two, Sweetie, just so I'll know what else to watch out for?

The second one is, for men at least, forgetting to do your flies up.

The third?
Forgetting to undo them in the first place






#18605 02/12/2001 11:57 AM
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The other option is

(ii) Hairs on the palm of your hand
(iii) looking for them!


#18606 02/12/2001 1:34 PM
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or like the billy goats of nursery rhyms-- hairs on your chinny, chin, chin!

I still of an age where a tweezer works!-- but i first learned about 'waxing' as a means of hair removal from my nana, who, waxed her chin every 3 days or so.


#18607 02/12/2001 2:04 PM
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Good Lord - and I used to think my Grandma was saying, "I had a good chinwag with my friends this week!"



#18608 02/12/2001 2:25 PM
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of Troy wrote : but i first learned about 'waxing' as a means of hair removal from my nana, who, waxed her chin every 3 days or so

Excuse me a moment while I go melt a candle!
wow


#18609 02/12/2001 2:31 PM
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OK. What is the Gaelic (and I know there are different forms of the language) word for Celtic? Maybe the hard C for the tribe stems from its own language.


#18610 02/12/2001 2:46 PM
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AnnaS asks: What is the Gaelic word for Celtic?

In modern Scottish it is Gaidhealach for the race and Gàidhlig for the language. In neither of those words is the dh pronounced anything at all like a dental plosive or stop. If heard at all it would be something of a y sound. What the word was back when the Scots still lived in Hibernia when the Romans (who still pronounced all Cs hard anyway and who first met the Celts much earlier in the Gauls) I have no idea.

There were also Goidelic Celts (Scots and Irish) and Brythonic Celts (Britons and Gauls) and the terms above would only refer, at least in modern Gaelic, probably only to the Goidelic.


#18611 02/12/2001 6:39 PM
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The modern Welsh form of the Brythonic tongue would, I think, be celtaidd, rendered KEL-ti-eeth, tho' I may be making that end sound too long and open. My Welsh is even worse'n my English spillin!


#18612 02/13/2001 7:49 AM
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I don't think the Celts traditionally ever called themselves just that; it was more a name given to them by .... (fill in the blank: the Romans?, the Normans?). The names to describe themselves are far more localised.


#18613 02/13/2001 11:10 AM
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I keep thinking that the /k/ pronunciation of Celtic must be of the same nature as the /k/ pronunciation of the word ceilidh, referring to a traditional social event in Scotland, with much music and vigorous folk-dancing. Any thoughts on this?

Ceilidhs are jolly good fun, and such a good way of burning calories!



#18614 02/13/2001 11:47 AM
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more a name given to them by ....

Yes, I think that is partly true, in that most groups are more clearly recognised by the outsider - I believe the origin of the word is Latin (Celtae?) from Greek keltoi, hence the hard k sound. Not sure where Ceilidh fits in though Marianna - I think that comes direct from the Irish Gaelic form, doesn't it Helen?


#18615 02/13/2001 7:43 PM
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Marianna suggests: I keep thinking that the /k/ pronunciation of Celtic must be of the same nature as the /k/ pronunciation of the word ceilidh

The Gaelic (whether Irish or Scots) c is always a hard, /k/ sound, regardless of the following sound. I don't think there is any connection between the word céilidh (I believe the Irish is céili without the dh and I'm not sure about the é in the Irish) and the word Celtic. I don't doubt that there was some connection between the Greek keltoi and the Celts name for themselves. The Scots Gaidhealach is just too close and probably the dh was pronounced time back way back.


#18616 02/13/2001 8:59 PM
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from Greek keltoi

Yes, keltoi is the Greek word for warrior.


#18617 02/13/2001 9:13 PM
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belM>But it seems odd that the U.S. would have adopted this pronunciation [seltic] from the French.

maybe not that odd...if the French were the first to use the term in modern times, we would have been much more likely to follow their lead then would the British, who would have taken pains to appropriate a Greek/Latin style!


#18618 02/14/2001 12:31 AM
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Yep, I was thinking of a phonetic correlation more than an etymological connection. I didn't know that c is always a /k/ in Gaelic. Thanks, Faldage.


#18619 02/14/2001 12:22 PM
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c is always a /k/ in Gaelic

I live next to a village with a wonderful castle which for many decades was known as Kilgerran - but has now been reinstated as Cilgerran. And I work in the town of Cardigan, which in Welsh is pronounced Aber-ti-vee

http://www.castlewales.com/cliger.html


(edit-in) I should explain that the Welsh name is Aberteifi = Mouth of the Teifi, which is the tidal estuary that made Cardigan a major port in previous years - bigger than Bristol at one time, and home to several vessels taking immigrants to the USA.

#18620 02/19/2001 3:06 AM
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In reply to:

keltoi is the Greek word for warrior


Umm, actually, LSJ (http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/lexindex?lookup=*kelto/s&lang=greek ) only gives Celts for Keltoi.

Bingley



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#18621 02/19/2001 4:23 PM
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keltoi is the Greek word for warrior

And, in Hawaiian, koa is a word for warrior.
The Hale Koa hotel in Waikiki is The House (hale) of the Warrior
wow


#18622 02/19/2001 4:40 PM
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wow said: The Hale Koa hotel in Waikiki is The House (hale) of the Warrior.

So do they leave mince on your pillow?




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