T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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958.1 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Apr 17 1992 06:20 | 11 |
|
The pronunciation is the same and computer folklore says there is a
reason for that. UNIX(tm) had its roots in in a mainframe OS called
MULTICS. But many MULTICS features had to be removed in order to make
an OS that would fit on minicomputers -- so when people asked, "Why do
they call it UNIX?" the standard answer was "Because it is just MULTICS
with its gonads whacked off.�
JP
�That's a radical orchidectomy for the hardcore JOYOFLEXers.
|
958.2 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Fri Apr 17 1992 07:34 | 2 |
| Re .1: Thank you, John.
Denis.
|
958.3 | To quote Maggie Dubois, "Not necessarily." | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Fri Apr 17 1992 07:50 | 16 |
| Not so fast, there, Podnuh!
John's right that in certain dialects of American pronunciation there
is no discernible difference between "UNIX" and "eunuchs.' However, in
other dialects, such as those you hear from people who have been truly
educated in the liberal arts and who care about language, instead of
merely having passed through a liberal-arts curriculum on the way to a
job, there is a subtle but real difference. (These are people for whom
"Mary," "merry," and "marry" have three several pronunciations. Kate
Hepburn's or the late John Houseman's speech would illustrate the
difference clearly.)
"UNIX" is pronounced `yoo-nicks whereas "eunuchs" is pronounced
`yoo-n<schwa>ks.
-dick
|
958.4 | "Oh, I didn't know they held conventions." | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Apr 17 1992 11:55 | 0 |
958.5 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Apr 17 1992 12:43 | 28 |
|
Yeah, you can find a difference in pronunciation, if you pursue the
matter to some arbitrary level of precision. I've never actually spoken
with anyone with such precise enunciation/elocution, but if I ever find
myself discussing operating systems with the likes of Alistair Cooke, I
will certainly take Dick's comments to heart.
Deprived, as I am, of a liberal arts education, I feel unqualified to
comment on the origins and eventual destination of the "schwa" sound.
I do so now only because it is a rathole and therefore my duty, as a
'LEXer in good standing, to enter it.
Correct me if I'm wrong (an unnecessary request if ever I made one),
but isn't that the sound denoted by the upside-down "e" in a
dictionary's legend? My admittedly inferior dictionary (Webster's New
Collegiate) has as an example of the "schwa" sound the "e" in "kitten."
I always took the "schwa" to be, in essence, a throwing up of the hands
on the part of pronunciation purists. I was taught that "schwa" is
pronounced somewhere between short e, short i, short a, etc.
So I think that to say the second syllable of "eunuchs" is the "schwa"
sound is begging the question. But what do I know? In the set of
people who still speak to me at all, "kitten" would be pronounced much
the same if it were spelled kitten, kittan, kittin, kitton, kittyn, or
kittun. In fact, the best representation of the might be "kit'n" --
that second syllable is pretty much swallowed...
JP
|
958.6 | Schwa-llowed? | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Fri Apr 17 1992 14:21 | 7 |
| The schwa isn't a throwing-up of hands. It represents a mostly
undifferentiated sound of the "uh" variety but not as solid as a real
"uh" would be. It's the second vowel sound in "bashfuL" or "bassinet"
or "bastard." It's not quite unvoiced, as would be indicated by
"kitt'n."
-dick
|
958.7 | Don't have my IPA cheat-sheet handy... | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Apr 17 1992 15:20 | 14 |
| Schwa is a mid-mid unrounded vowel. Below it is
the low-mid vowel written in IPA as an upside-down
"v", and above is the high-mid vowel written as
a barred small uppercase "I". The latter glyph is
also used for a high-back unrounded vowel (as in
Turkish) sometimes--I don't know which is the offical
IPA version.
There's also rounded, retroflexed, nasalized, etc.
versions.
Hardly a "beats me" symbol!
-John Bishop
|
958.8 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Mon Apr 20 1992 02:44 | 16 |
| Rathole on .0, in case it might comfort you or your friend:
4 years ago, when UNIX OS was already popular, I was talking in English[*]
with an American COMPUTER ORIENTED relative. While I thought I was talking
about UNIX OS (YUK!!!), he had trouble understanding me and after some
time and some weird exchanges, light descended upon me and I asked if he
thought I was talking about E-U-N-U-C-H-S... yes, that's what he thought.
[* or some descendant thereof :-)]
End of rathole.
-- Norman Diamond
P.S. The name schwa doesn't sound so much like a throwing up of hands,
rather a throwing up of tongue.
|
958.9 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Mon Apr 20 1992 23:32 | 3 |
| Re the few preceding ones: To continue the rathole, how do you
pronounce the word "schwa", anyway?
Denis.
|
958.10 | choix | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Tue Apr 21 1992 05:50 | 14 |
| Interesting question, Denis. I've often wondered about the derivation.
It's pronounced not unlike `choix'.
When I first met the word, I thought it came from that word `because'
it was a cross between a not-very-clear A, a not-very-clear E etc -
you pays your money and you takes your choix.
I found, after not too long an exposure to the company of Daniel Jones
(who pronounced `taxis' and `taxes' differently - neither,
incidentally, with a schwa) that my guess must be wrong because
the schwa and any other vowel were so clearly distinguishable
(and, in many dialects, distinct).
b
|
958.11 | Yoix, boix, & choix! | RDVAX::KALIKOW | The Gods of the Mill grind slowly... | Tue Apr 21 1992 06:05 | 1 |
|
|
958.12 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Tue Apr 21 1992 06:29 | 11 |
|
Re: .7
John, who determines the mapping between those IPA symbols and physical
sounds? And how are they kept from "drifting" over time?
Does the BBC have a vault of CDs that contain the standard schwa,
etc., sounds?
JP
|
958.13 | Here's the derivation | PENUTS::NOBLE | Stranger ones have come by here | Tue Apr 21 1992 08:44 | 6 |
| "Schwa" derives from a Hebrew word "schewa", which seems to have
essentially the same meaning. It's shown in Hebrew by two dots (:).
Back on the original topic, it seems to me someone's got to be
mumbling pretty severely for "unix" to be confused with "eunuchs".
|
958.14 | (so to speak) | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Apr 21 1992 09:10 | 6 |
|
>> Back on the original topic, it seems to me someone's got to be
>> mumbling pretty severely for "unix" to be confused with "eunuchs".
Hear, hear.
|
958.15 | Thus and so | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Tue Apr 21 1992 09:14 | 24 |
| Re .12:
There is a recording somewhere. It doesn't need a vault to house it.
The IPA chart is an absolute mapping of sounds to symbols. What
drifts is the way a particular natural language's phonemes (a
different thing entirely, but with a degree of overlap, so that it
makes sense to use a small number of IPA symbols but lineated from
their context by slashes rather than brackets) are realized by
different speakers. This changes over space and over time.
Incidentally, the BBC has nothing to do with it - except perhaps
organizationally at some stage. The IPA symbols don't deal exclusively
with the speech sounds of English, but with speech sounds produced
in all known natural languages. The `I' stands for International.
Re .10
My reference to Daniel Jones (who was instrumental in the drawing
up of the IPA chart) was misleading. It wasn't Jones who said
`taxes' and `taxis' in distinct ways. I imagine many speakers of
English do today. I do too. The thing about Jones (like many if not most
English-speakers of his day) is that he pronounced those two words
_the_same_.
|
958.16 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Tue Apr 21 1992 10:01 | 19 |
|
Re: 15.
Thanks for the edification (that bit about the BBC was a joke, by the
way -- I figured if any organization ought to be the keeper of the
pronunciation flame, the beeb is it).
Given that phonemes drift, we seem to have an even stickier situation
than with the changing meaning of words. Vocabulary definitions are
at least loosely tied to dictionaries (which are plentiful and
persistent). But you don't see (hear) too many renditions of these
IPA reference recordings.
Re: .13 and .14.
Not exactly. My pronunciation may be atrocious but I say it loud and
clear.
JP
|
958.17 | IPA is based in anatomy | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Apr 21 1992 11:34 | 25 |
| The IPA is a mapping from articulations to symbols. It's defined in
terms of physical landmarks in the vocal tract and particular forms
of energy release. So it won't "drift". IPA is not phonemes, which
is a term implying meaningful difference from other phonemes. When
I was getting my Linguistics degree we didn't listen to canonical
sounds, but learned how to make the sounds ourselves based on the
mapping.
Of course, people use the IPA to create phonemic systems, so they can
write things like /cat/ when recording a language. Strictly speaking
there're a number of steps being skipped and not noted in such cases,
and careful linguists distinguish between a transcription of a speaker
saying a word and the string of morphophonemes which you use to enter
the word in a dictionary.
So the process goes through a series of steps, with details dropping
as you go, but with "meaning" being added:
sounds --> phonetic transcription --> phonemic entry --> morphophonemes
IPA used here offically
In the latter two stages you need a phonemic alphabet, and most people
use the IPA symbols "nearest" the phonemes.
-John Bishop
|
958.18 | Indeed | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Wed Apr 22 1992 06:19 | 16 |
| � The IPA is a mapping from articulations to symbols.
Yes. The idea of recordings came up, and I ran with it. There is
(or was) a recording, but it was in the nature of a party game
rather than a holy grail: `Bet you can't do a labialized retroflex
velaric click after the port has been twice round the table' - sort
of thing.
Another problem with this discussion is that there is (in this
conference in general, rather than this note) a certain latitude
(if not laxity) in interpretations of the term `phoneme'. This
sort of definition belongs in a first-year essay (`Compare
and contrast phonemes and allophones') rather than in a notes
file. My fault for mentioning phonemes in the first place.
b
|
958.19 | | PAOIS::HILL | Another migrant worker! | Wed Apr 22 1992 08:28 | 6 |
| Re .18
Sorry, but I'd rather discuss the difference between pheromones and
phonemes ;-)
Nick
|
958.20 | sorry | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Apr 22 1992 09:15 | 6 |
|
Re: .19
That would require a very cunning linguist.
JP
|
958.21 | | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Wed Apr 22 1992 20:01 | 9 |
| > Back on the original topic, it seems to me someone's got to be
> mumbling pretty severely for "unix" to be confused with "eunuchs".
Oh I don't know. To someone who isn't computer-oriented, "yewnicks"
would sound close enough to "eunuchs" to be heard as that, even if that
person normally can distinguish between a schwa and the other phoneme.
--Simon
|
958.22 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Emotional Baggage? Just carry-on. | Thu Apr 23 1992 08:05 | 12 |
| >Back on the original topic, it seems to me someone's got to be
>mumbling pretty severely for "unix" to be confused with "eunuchs".
Huh? For both words, the first syllable is stressed, and pronounced
with what we called in grammar school a "long U" sound; for the
second syllable, one word uses a "short I", the other uses a schwa.
Now, the "short I" sound and the schwa are different, but not *that*
different, so the difference between UNIX and eunuchs just isn't
that large -- unless you pronounce the two words differently than I do.
andrew
|
958.23 | expecting to see you nix this... | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Thu Apr 23 1992 10:28 | 22 |
|
>Back on the original topic, it seems to me someone's got to be
>mumbling pretty severely for "unix" to be confused with "eunuchs".
>>> Huh? For both words, the first syllable is stressed, and pronounced
>>> with what we called in grammar school a "long U" sound; for the
>>> second syllable, one word uses a "short I", the other uses a schwa.
>>> Now, the "short I" sound and the schwa are different, but not *that*
>>> different, so the difference between UNIX and eunuchs just isn't
>>> that large -- unless you pronounce the two words differently than I do.
Andrew, is this a response or an answer? 8^).
Well, you know - maybe that's the problem - pronunciations certainly
do differ here, but I have to agree with Robert (whom I happen
to know rarely mumbles). "You-nicks" and "you-nucks" are pretty
different, as far as I'm concerned, and that's how they're supposed
to be pronounced.
Di
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958.24 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Apr 23 1992 10:57 | 2 |
| Right, but if somebody has never heard "you-nicks", then it is far
more likely to be heard as "you-nucks".
|
958.25 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Elvis killed JFK | Thu Apr 23 1992 13:33 | 9 |
| >Back on the original topic, it seems to me someone's got to be
>mumbling pretty severely for "unix" to be confused with "eunuchs".
My take on this is that someone would have to be ee-nun-cee-
a-ting prih-tee suh-vere-lee for anyone to be able make a
real distinction. I mean, we are talking about real English
speakers in real conversations, aren't we?
-- C
|
958.26 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Apr 24 1992 00:18 | 9 |
| I have heard American speakers who seemed to think that "schwa" was
the only vowel, nd vrn knws tht cn ndrstnd nglsh wth th vwls rmvd, but
real English speakers live closer to Europe and in many European
languages they are important.
With the word in isolation and possibly varying dialects I might be
uncertain whether it was Unix or eunuchs, but after a couple of
sentences to establish the dialect I would have no trouble
distinguishing the two with an English speaker.
|
958.27 | touche' | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Apr 24 1992 07:15 | 8 |
|
>> Right, but if somebody has never heard "you-nicks", then it is far
>> more likely to be heard as "you-nucks".
That's true and you make a good point.
Di
|
958.28 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Sun Apr 26 1992 19:11 | 6 |
| >That's true and you make a good point.
UNIX points often tend to be bad because of horrible syntax and
inadequate error checking capabilities in the C language.
On the other hand, EUNUCHS can't point at all.
|
958.29 | Au contraire... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | The Gods of the Mill grind slowly... | Sun Apr 26 1992 21:18 | 6 |
| Methinks they point just fine; just that they can't spawn
subprocesses...
:-)
|
958.30 | horrors | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Apr 27 1992 10:11 | 12 |
|
>> do differ here, but I have to agree with Robert (whom I happen
>> to know rarely mumbles). "You-nicks" and "you-nucks" are pretty
Please pardon my abuse of "whom" here. That should be "who",
me thinks. Never would have gotten by in GRAMMAR 8^).
Speaking of which, anyone know what has happened to GRAMMAR?
Sorry if this has been answered already.
Di
|
958.31 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Apr 27 1992 11:31 | 2 |
| GRAMMAR is still there, although not particularly active in the last
couple of weeks.
|
958.32 | | KAHALA::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 264-1930, DDD/M16 | Mon Apr 27 1992 11:41 | 5 |
| .28
> On the other hand, EUNUCHS can't point at all.
see also "null pointer"
|
958.33 | hmmm | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Apr 27 1992 13:06 | 8 |
|
>> GRAMMAR is still there, although not particularly active in the last
>> couple of weeks.
Okay, thanks. The node has been unreachable from here for
over a month, but I just tried it and was successful. Strange.
|
958.34 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Mon Apr 27 1992 18:11 | 4 |
| A continuously decreasing portion of the English-speaking world is
successful in reaching GRAMMAR. In fact, even when we add the slightly
growing number who believe themselves successful in reaching GRAMMER,
the total is still on the decline. We gotta face it its a dieing produckt.
|
958.35 | Spawning Subprocesses | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Thu Mar 04 1993 14:56 | 4 |
| Spawning subprocesses is a VMS-ism. We all know that in Eunuchs land, it's
called forking. It's debateable as to whether it's doable in this case. :-)
Wook (Back again after a long hiatus not to be confused with a hiatal hernia.)
|