As a kid, I never understood much of English pronunciation, at it is my native language:
Sew — ‘ew’ is pronounced ‘oh’ is one is dealing with needle and thread or with farming.Iron – is pronounced ‘ay-EARN’, not ‘i-RUN’.Pint – is pronounced with a long “i”, despite having two consonants after it [by rules in English, this should be a short sound], yet ‘hint’ (spelled similarly and having two consonants] is pronounced with a short ‘i’. sound.Rhythm – Rule I was taught early on: each syllable in a word has to have a vowel. Rhythm is pronounced with two syllables in speaking and most songs I’ve sung, yet would be spelled ‘rhy – thm’. is the ‘h’ moonlighting as a vowel?
Just thoughts I’ve had since I was a child and have never gotten an answer for. Any ideas?
abbybookcase: There are three ways in which languages get new words: French, German, or English.French: Turn it over to Academie Francaise and in a decade or so, they will have decided if it is a word; until then, it cannot be used in a legal document.German: Describe it in as few words as possible, knock out the spaces and cram the whole thing together. You have a word, but it is absurdly long.English: Look around and see who has a word for that; steal it and claim it is English, but keep the original Latin alphabet spelling. As a result, it will be horribly mispronounced.
When I was a kid, the barber I went to had somewhat of a sense of humor. When it was my turn he would say, you’re next mon – sewer. Being a kid, it cracked me up every time.
Llewellenbruce over 9 years ago
Roscoe’s fleas are bothering him in the nextto last panel.
Templo S.U.D. over 9 years ago
If this were animated with voice over, Opal would probably have selective hearing when it came to “sewer.”
puddymom over 9 years ago
Earl, go get some Advantage or Frontline for Roscoe. Leave Opal in peace.
susanwobb over 9 years ago
Stitcher.
King_Shark over 9 years ago
Brain drain.
dadoctah over 9 years ago
Better hope she doesn’t find a lawyer, or you’ll learn just what a great suer she really is.
Pocosdad over 9 years ago
Within the sewing community on-line, they’re now referring to themselves as “sewists.”
thirdguy over 9 years ago
Sewists? Is that what we used to call “Witch”?
jtviper7 over 9 years ago
“Or better still, just go away” It’s a good thing Opal’s not married to Floyd Mayweather…Pow ,Zoom , to the moon.
abbybookcase over 9 years ago
my grandfather used to call my grandmother’s sewing circle “stitch and b***h”"
emjaycee over 9 years ago
As a kid, I never understood much of English pronunciation, at it is my native language:
Sew — ‘ew’ is pronounced ‘oh’ is one is dealing with needle and thread or with farming.Iron – is pronounced ‘ay-EARN’, not ‘i-RUN’.Pint – is pronounced with a long “i”, despite having two consonants after it [by rules in English, this should be a short sound], yet ‘hint’ (spelled similarly and having two consonants] is pronounced with a short ‘i’. sound.Rhythm – Rule I was taught early on: each syllable in a word has to have a vowel. Rhythm is pronounced with two syllables in speaking and most songs I’ve sung, yet would be spelled ‘rhy – thm’. is the ‘h’ moonlighting as a vowel?Just thoughts I’ve had since I was a child and have never gotten an answer for. Any ideas?
Number Three over 9 years ago
Sewer? Hahahaha… Good one!xxx
Mary McNeil Premium Member over 9 years ago
If she was into cartooning, she would be a good drawer.
hippogriff over 9 years ago
abbybookcase: There are three ways in which languages get new words: French, German, or English.French: Turn it over to Academie Francaise and in a decade or so, they will have decided if it is a word; until then, it cannot be used in a legal document.German: Describe it in as few words as possible, knock out the spaces and cram the whole thing together. You have a word, but it is absurdly long.English: Look around and see who has a word for that; steal it and claim it is English, but keep the original Latin alphabet spelling. As a result, it will be horribly mispronounced.
english.ann over 9 years ago
On resumes and job applications, I would describe one past job as “industrial sewing machine operator” or “industrial sew-er”.
Jeff0811 over 9 years ago
When I was a kid, the barber I went to had somewhat of a sense of humor. When it was my turn he would say, you’re next mon – sewer. Being a kid, it cracked me up every time.