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Caulfield: If we pronounce "nature" "naitcher" why don't we pronounce manure. "mainyer"? Mrs. Olsen: Caulfield, grow up. Frazz: Not an outrageous request. Caulfield: Excuse me if I couldn't think of a word that was more mature.
ne7⊠it could go on for hoursâŠDonât even START on âoughâcoughboughthoughthroughenough(slough can rhyme with BOTH of the last twoâŠ)thoughtwhich BTW rhymes with caughttautbut not drought..âŠ. my brain hurtsâŠ
âThe problem with defending the purity of the English language is that English is about as pure as a cribhouse whore. We donât just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.â â James Nicoll
I wonder about this too. I am not native English and during my questionably successful attempts to learn this language, I realised that it is (they are) two different languages. The written English and the spoken English have some obscure, twisted relatedness, but clearly not the same language. :)
runar, great quoteâŠSusan, I used to teach English as a second language to folks from around the worldâŠâŠ..Pronunciation drove them crazyâŠ.Why? Why? they would askâŠ.Sometimes I would just apologize on behalf of English speakers everywhereâŠ
Eddie Izzardâs award winning âDress to Killâ has a great segment on the difference in British and English pronunciations of several wordsâŠlaugh out loud funny. I have watched it 20, 30 times, laughing all the way through. Netflix it!!
English is like a platypus, isnât it? So English has a live and let live attitude. Given its history, can you blame it? Iâm reminded of this verse from The Carsâ song âGood Times Rollâ: If the illusion is real let them give you a ride. If they got thunder appeal let them be on your side.
RUNAR: English grows words by stealing them from other languages; as a result, either the spelling is mutilated to keep the pronunciation, the pronunciation messed to keep the spelling, or both damaged..Other languages have their quirks (gender being the most obvious), but less so because of different ways to gain words. German describes it in as few words as possible, knocks out the spaces, and it is a new word â long, but one word. French turns it over lâAcademie Française, which studies it for a decade before declaring it a proper word and thus one which can be used in legal documents. I saw a filler in a 1970s newspaper which reported they had approved âspaghettiâ as a proper French word. I keep wondering what they used before.
When I was teaching middle school, the state sent some experts to teach us how to teach phonics. Most of the students were learining English. They had a good grasp of phonics in Spanish, but had limited English vocabulary. We asked for suggestions about teaching the meaning of words, but the experts said they werenât there to do that. The phonics strategies included sounding out nonesense words to make up for the lack of words to fit some patterns. Some of the so-called nonesense words were actual words. So much for experts.
Has to do with word origins. Frequently, although not in this case, they come from different languages. In this case though, they both come from Latin, originally. Nature was one word in latin. Manure was 2 words combined. Hence the difference in pronunciation.
Wait, so that was IT yesterday?? âEdgar Alan Poodleâ? THAT was Caulfieldâs brilliant literary reference? I thought the storyline would be resolved today, with somethingâŠuh, a bit more clever than that (really wasnât any better than âDog Quixoteâ).
I love the english language. it is the language that is flexible..Davicdh 48 is on to something. English is an active languageâŠ.Big timeâŠ.It grabs things that it needs..adopts them wholeâŠ. And the neat thing is all the other languages of the world adopt English words too. English is the most beautiful and intricate language ever spoken in the worldâŠAll things are a part of itâŠThink Iâll go write a songâŠ
Mrs. Olsen needs to have Caulfield read THE TOUGH COUGHS AS HE PLOUGHS THE DOUGH, by Dr. Seuss (which, BTW, is supposed to be pronounced âSoyceâ, not âSooseâ.)
Cofyjunky over 12 years ago
Caulfield really does need to evolve in a positive direction. M-A-T-U-R-E wouldâve been a better word.
SusanSunshine Premium Member over 12 years ago
âManureâ isnât pronounce in a way thatâs parallel to âpictureâ OR âmatureââŠ
And âconureâ and âconjureâ sound similarâŠ. but nothing like âmanure.â Welcome to English, those who are trying to learn it.
The Old Wolf over 12 years ago
Did he pronounce it âMaytcherâ?
SusanSunshine Premium Member over 12 years ago
ne7⊠it could go on for hoursâŠDonât even START on âoughâcoughboughthoughthroughenough(slough can rhyme with BOTH of the last twoâŠ)thoughtwhich BTW rhymes with caughttautbut not drought..âŠ. my brain hurtsâŠ
runar over 12 years ago
What three-letter word makes a different word when combined with the following letters:
CDLRSW?
Is there another way to spell ghoti?
runar over 12 years ago
âThe problem with defending the purity of the English language is that English is about as pure as a cribhouse whore. We donât just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.â â James Nicoll
emjaycee over 12 years ago
Mouse => MiceLouse => LiceHouse =/>Hice
Tooth => TeethBooth =/> Beeth
Goose => GeeseMoose =/> Meese
malendil over 12 years ago
I wonder about this too. I am not native English and during my questionably successful attempts to learn this language, I realised that it is (they are) two different languages. The written English and the spoken English have some obscure, twisted relatedness, but clearly not the same language. :)
Varnes over 12 years ago
runar, great quoteâŠSusan, I used to teach English as a second language to folks from around the worldâŠâŠ..Pronunciation drove them crazyâŠ.Why? Why? they would askâŠ.Sometimes I would just apologize on behalf of English speakers everywhereâŠ
jessegooddoggy over 12 years ago
Eddie Izzardâs award winning âDress to Killâ has a great segment on the difference in British and English pronunciations of several wordsâŠlaugh out loud funny. I have watched it 20, 30 times, laughing all the way through. Netflix it!!
jessegooddoggy over 12 years ago
That would be British and AmericanâŠ.
Arianne over 12 years ago
English is like a platypus, isnât it? So English has a live and let live attitude. Given its history, can you blame it? Iâm reminded of this verse from The Carsâ song âGood Times Rollâ: If the illusion is real let them give you a ride. If they got thunder appeal let them be on your side.
vwdualnomand over 12 years ago
many languages have some quirks. english, german, spanish, japanese, etcâŠ
Stephen Gilberg over 12 years ago
Then thereâs âstature,â another nonrhyme.
hippogriff over 12 years ago
RUNAR: English grows words by stealing them from other languages; as a result, either the spelling is mutilated to keep the pronunciation, the pronunciation messed to keep the spelling, or both damaged..Other languages have their quirks (gender being the most obvious), but less so because of different ways to gain words. German describes it in as few words as possible, knocks out the spaces, and it is a new word â long, but one word. French turns it over lâAcademie Française, which studies it for a decade before declaring it a proper word and thus one which can be used in legal documents. I saw a filler in a 1970s newspaper which reported they had approved âspaghettiâ as a proper French word. I keep wondering what they used before.
ealeseth over 12 years ago
When I was teaching middle school, the state sent some experts to teach us how to teach phonics. Most of the students were learining English. They had a good grasp of phonics in Spanish, but had limited English vocabulary. We asked for suggestions about teaching the meaning of words, but the experts said they werenât there to do that. The phonics strategies included sounding out nonesense words to make up for the lack of words to fit some patterns. Some of the so-called nonesense words were actual words. So much for experts.
Defective over 12 years ago
Has to do with word origins. Frequently, although not in this case, they come from different languages. In this case though, they both come from Latin, originally. Nature was one word in latin. Manure was 2 words combined. Hence the difference in pronunciation.
davidh48 over 12 years ago
Consider that âEnglishâ is not a language, but a Meta-language.
Itâs not passive, but evolving; thus the richness of it.
Itâs beautiful, because it absorbs/amalgamates all other languages. It doesnât care about particular phonics, it simply accepts them.
rfeinberg over 12 years ago
Wait, so that was IT yesterday?? âEdgar Alan Poodleâ? THAT was Caulfieldâs brilliant literary reference? I thought the storyline would be resolved today, with somethingâŠuh, a bit more clever than that (really wasnât any better than âDog Quixoteâ).
rfeinberg over 12 years ago
Oh, my bad, I guess â I missed yesterdayâs strip. Pit and the Pendulum? Still lame.
cezpaige over 12 years ago
you forgot âgaolâ
Varnes over 12 years ago
I love the english language. it is the language that is flexible..Davicdh 48 is on to something. English is an active languageâŠ.Big timeâŠ.It grabs things that it needs..adopts them wholeâŠ. And the neat thing is all the other languages of the world adopt English words too. English is the most beautiful and intricate language ever spoken in the worldâŠAll things are a part of itâŠThink Iâll go write a songâŠ
DKHenderson 4 months ago
Mrs. Olsen needs to have Caulfield read THE TOUGH COUGHS AS HE PLOUGHS THE DOUGH, by Dr. Seuss (which, BTW, is supposed to be pronounced âSoyceâ, not âSooseâ.)