987: elipse and eclipse Aug 22, 2017
986: shambles Aug 21, 2017
985: teem and team Aug 20, 2017
984: Submodifiers Aug 19, 2017
983: Past Tense of Screenshot: Strong or Weak? Aug 18, 2017
As discussed on the Word Facts post about ablauts, strong verbs are almost always conjugated with the present tense featuring a high vowel like /ɪ/ in 'spring' or /eə/ in 'wear' that becomes a mid or low vowel like /æ/ in 'sprang', /ə/ in 'sprung', or /oə/ in 'wore' in the past tense. For more on types of vowels, see the image below, from speechmodification.com. This is one of the many conventions that people will follow naturally, even in words that are newly created, but it does pose a few problems. 'Shoot' for example is a strong verb that follows that same pattern, going from a high vowel /u/ to a low vowel /a/ in its past tense for 'shot'. In compounded words where a strong noun, strong verb, or irregular word happens to be at the end, speakers tend to modify the compound in the same way as they would if it appeared on its own, so 'mailman' becomes 'mailmen' not 'mailmans'. However, the past tense form 'shot' appears at the end of 'screenshot' which is used as a present tense verb, i.e. meaning "to take a screenshot", so even though this is a strong verb as the final element of the compound, there is no way for there to be a lower vowel. In fact, the only other low vowel in English is /æ/ as in 'cat' or in this case, possibly, 'screenshat'. That would be the only reasonable past tense form of 'screenshot' if we take it to be a strong verb, which is why people might be drawn towards the alternative, weak form 'screenshotted'.
982: -grad (Eastern European Cities) Aug 17, 2017
There are lots of cities in the Americas with the word 'city' in the name, like Oklahoma City, the capital of Oklahoma, or Mexico City (Ciudad de Mexico), the capital of Mexico. In other parts of the word this is not so common, or at least not outright. Some European cities, particularly in places that speak Germanic languages with the exception of Strasbourg have the ending '-burg' which no longer means 'city', but historically meant 'fort' or what might have constituted 'city' at the time. Likewise, the names of cities in Eastern European countries often appear with the ending '-grad', though the spelling is sometimes slightly different. The capital of Serbia is 'Belgrade' coming from Slavic for 'white city'. There are a number of other Eastern European places whose name meant 'white city' including 'Belgorod' in Russia and 'Biograd na Moru' in Croatia. It should be noted that Croatian and Serbian are incredibly similar, and the Serbian pronunciation for their own capital city is 'Beograd': almost identical to 'Biograd'. Plenty of other places have that ending but don't mean 'white city' historically, such as 'Petrograd', the name for St. Petersburg between 1914 and 1924. In fact, 'Petrograd' was adopted as the name in 1914 instead of St. Petersburg to make it sound less German and more Slavic.
981: New Strong Verbs Aug 16, 2017
Anyone who reads Word Facts often will have heard plenty by now about strong verbs. There are relatively few of these, and they tend to follow the pattern of '-i-, -a-, -u-', but historically there was a great deal more variation, as one can still see with words like 'dive, dove', and 'tear, tore'. Moreover, nearly all of these are Germanic, coming from Old English for the most part, but there are a few words which were historically weak verbs and then became strong verbs. Among them are 'dig, dug' and 'fling, flung'; they happen to be Germanic in origin coincidentally, and the modern strong past tense form is somewhat invented. With those words, as well as others like 'wear, wore', even though they developed different forms than they had originally, they still followed the same patterns of words that they resemble in sound to some extent. Nevertheless, while it is true that English has gained some new strong verbs, more often they are lost; the word 'climb' used to become 'clumb' in the past tense rather than 'climbed' as it is for most people now, but that original form is still used in some parts of Appalachia.
980: aryan Aug 15, 2017
It should be noted that Nazis, especially academics, did not really prefer the term 'Aryan' because even though it distinguishes from Semitic languages like Hebrew and Arabic, it denotes too many peoples such as Slavs (and German-speaking Jews), and as anti-semitic German nationalists this was too inclusive. This term became more popular in America among neo-Nazis because white Americans tended to have ancestors from all over Europe (not necessarily Germany), as 'Aryan' suggests with its pan-European connotations. As side-note, the name for the country Iran is related to 'Aryan', and the Persian language belongs to the Indo-Aryan family.
979: Pluralizing Irregular Compounds Aug 14, 2017
978: Double Negative Aug 13, 2017
977: Ablaut (Reduplication part 3/3) Aug 12, 2017
This is the third and final (for now) post on reduplication; click the links day 1 and day 2 for the previous ones. As discussed yesterday, English does not use reduplication to indicate verbal modification in the way that other languages like Latin or Gothic. Nevertheless, English does have ablauts: a common feature in Germanic strong verbs and strong nouns. These appear in related forms that are not irregular, like 'swim, swam, swum', 'drink, drank, drunk', and 'spring, sprang, sprung' for which the form of the vowel is changed in the same way from word to word. To be clear, ablauts are not themselves reduplicates, but there is a strong association between the two, and in words like the Greek' dérkomai, dédorka' ('δέρκομαι, δέδορκα') meaning 'I see' and 'I saw', both ablaut and reduplication is present. Additionally, English words like 'chit-chat' or 'ding-dong' employ so called 'ablaut reduplication' which uses both processes. It is almost always the case that in those words the first vowel is a high vowel, while the second is a low vowel. This is demonstrated on the image below depicting where vowels are produced on the tongue, taken from:
976: Derivation (Reduplication part 2/3) Aug 11, 2017
Stay tuned for even more tomorrow on reduplication.