T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
374.1 | Surely not... | WELSWS::MANNION | | Mon Jul 06 1987 08:34 | 6 |
| If I am not mistaken, these are homographs, whereas homophones sound
the same but may be spelled differently. Both are types of homonym.
My favourites are right, right, write and rite.
Phillip (fillip)
|
374.2 | Through / Threw | APTECH::RSTONE | Roy | Mon Jul 06 1987 09:53 | 1 |
|
|
374.3 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Jul 06 1987 10:12 | 9 |
| Re .1, .2:
None of the examples meet the specification in .0: Same spelling,
different sound (and meaning).
See topic 282, where there are around 40 of these things.
-- edp
|
374.4 | Can't wait to think up more! | DAMSEL::RENO | On the 8th Day God Created Huskies | Mon Jul 06 1987 14:31 | 8 |
| Those in .1 and .2 are _homo_nyms.
What you want, .0, is read, past tense of read, which is present
tense of read.
See? :-)
-debbie
|
374.5 | | APTECH::RSTONE | Roy | Mon Jul 06 1987 18:04 | 3 |
| Minute - 1/60th of an hour.
Minute - very tiny.
|
374.6 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Mon Jul 06 1987 19:40 | 5 |
| polish - from Poland
polish - make it shine
Bernie
|
374.7 | | WELSWS::MANNION | | Tue Jul 07 1987 05:13 | 3 |
| Would polish from Poland not be Polish polish?
Phillip
|
374.8 | Shine and use it up | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Tue Jul 07 1987 12:16 | 8 |
| If you shine up the can, you polish up the Polish polish.
If you use all the polish while shining it, you polish off the Polish
polish polish up.
-bs
|
374.9 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Jul 07 1987 13:44 | 6 |
| Re .5:
"Minute" was reported seven months ago, in topic 282.
-- edp
|
374.10 | The dear green place | WELSWS::MANNION | | Wed Jul 08 1987 05:21 | 9 |
| Polish is also what a drunken Glaswegian - of which there are supposed
to be not a few on Sauchiehall Street on Friday night - would refer
to the boys in blue as.
Funny how these topics always wander off the original track, isn't
it?
Phillip
|
374.11 | but it's so much fun | DEBIT::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Wed Jul 08 1987 14:07 | 6 |
| I thought tangents were the whole purpose of this file.
I mean, anybody can stay on the subject. It takes real talent to
come up with some of digressions we've explored . . .
--bonnie
|
374.12 | digression in progress... | DECSIM::HEILMAN | Speak softly and wear a loud shirt | Wed Jul 08 1987 19:23 | 15 |
| > I thought tangents were the whole purpose of this file.
If I digressed from this into puns about trigonometry (sined, sealed,
delivered, I'm yours...) would that make this note a tangent digressing
from a tangent?
I never meta-tangent I didn't like...
PS, I stole the "sined, sealed" pun from Buckeroo Bonzai, credit
where credit is due...
PPS, speaking of credit, I had to get someone to cosine my mortgage
so that I could buy my house.
|
374.13 | | YIPPEE::LIRON | | Thu Jul 09 1987 07:25 | 17 |
| I thought that heteronyms were words which differ in spelling,
and pronunciation, and meaning, and basically have nothing
to do with each other.
To find examples of such pairs is not an easy task. One
could offer:
Flamingo and station-wagon
I and antidisestablishmentarianism
Marks and Spencer
but then how can you be absolutely certain they really
*never* met before ?
roger
|
374.14 | Who? | WELSWS::MANNION | | Thu Jul 09 1987 08:45 | 8 |
| Or Marx and Spenser, which whilst heteronyms for themselves are
homophones for Marks and Spencer, should therefore properly be called
heterohoms, constitute a semantic field of multiple dimensions in
themselves and write exciting political tracts in nine-line stanzas.
Yes, that's it.
Phillip
|
374.15 | Tennis elbow foot | MARVIN::KNOWLES | | Thu Jul 09 1987 08:58 | 3 |
| I think .13 has it.. Weren't heteronyms named after Heteronymus
Bosch, who spent his life finding reasons for associating pairs
of words until he was stumped by aardvark and perambulator?
|
374.16 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | | Sat Jul 11 1987 05:17 | 7 |
| RE: .15
Didn't Heteronymus Bosch paint a picture called, "The Garden of
Wordly Delights?"
John M.
|
374.17 | | CLT::MALER | | Sat Jul 11 1987 09:49 | 7 |
| re .15--
I thought it was Zeus and potato he was stumped by. Wasn't it he
who discovered the obscure root of aardvark, namely "vark," pronounced
in modern times "walk"? This clearly relates to the root of
perambulator, namely "lator," which of course is the basis for
"do the 'gator walk."
|
374.18 | While we're off the subject.... | IOSG::DUTT | | Thu Jul 16 1987 08:26 | 3 |
| Did you know that Marx and Spencer are buried opposite each other
in Highgate cemetary?
|