Re: Counting syllables in 'fire' and other words
- From: the Omrud <usenet.omrud@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 08:38:33 GMT
James Hogg wrote:
Quoth Jerry Friedman <jerry_friedman@xxxxxxxxx>, and I quote:
On Jun 27, 5:34 pm, "Ildhund" <jn...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:R H Draney wrote......Maria Conlon filted:There is some sort of telepathic force at work tonight. I have justJohn Kane wrote, in part:Pronounced like "a long, long way to run"....rIt is fairly easy to give 'fire' a two syllable pronunication.Huh. Try one: far.
Of course Americans from the Deep South may be able to get 3 or
4 syllables out of it.
come in from nursing a nightcap beneath the stars, where I find r's
post waiting to be read. I had been musing over the 'puns in
languages other than English and French' thread, when some Bach
wafted across from an open window somewhere. This set me thinking
about musical 'puns', for want of a better term, like Liszt's
variations on B-A-C-H (which presumes that you call the white note
below C H and the black one below that B, Germanic style).
You know Bach himself used that motif, right?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-A-C-H_motif
Scroll down to the bottom for "Other signature motifs".
So here are three examples - Doh, a deer..., B A C H and D Es B. AnyIf you're willing to take "Doe, a deer", there's a children's riddle:
more?
Why is slippery ice like music?
If you don't C-sharp, you'll B-flat!
You might also be interested in groaning at this:
http://boredstiffgeeks.blogspot.com/2009/03/if-you-dont-c-sharp-youll-b-flat.html
[1] and the usage justification: we have dozens of words like road,There's German "Gasse", meaning "street", apparently. I can't think
way, track, street... for bits of ground to move on, but I can't
think of one cognate with g. "bahn", Scandinavian "bane|bana". Are
there any?
of any in English. (Assuming that by "cognate" you mean a word with
that kind of meaning. I think "cognate" more properly means a word
that descends from the same origin, such as "frail" and "fragile", or
"color" and "couleur".)
German "Gasse" has a cognate in English "gate", not the barrier
but the Scandinavian word found in street names like Kirkgate,
for example in York.
And as far south as Manchester - St Mary's Gate, Deansgate.
--
David
.
- References:
- Counting syllables in 'fire' and other words
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- From: Outspan
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- From: John Kane
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- From: Jerry Friedman
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