rg Posted August 25, 2006 Share Posted August 25, 2006 as i try to think back to my so-called upbringing in northeast pennsylvania many moons ago, i can still hear of many things that variously 'landed up' one way or another. i know the phrase 'to land up' was much in use back home, back then, and so i used it myself, as if it were the king's english. Link to comment
carbro Posted August 26, 2006 Share Posted August 26, 2006 one of the performers had been singled out for a great rendition of the role of "Herr von Finial" instead of Faninal. Given the elaborate "window treatments" of the set, it's no surprise that the reviewer had curtains on his mind.The reviewer . . . or the spellcheck! Link to comment
sandik Posted August 26, 2006 Share Posted August 26, 2006 I can definitely see how "You'll end up in jail" could sound like "You'll land up in jail." Well, there's Hammerstein and Kern in "Ol' Man River" "You get a little drunk and you lands in jail" Link to comment
bart Posted August 29, 2006 Share Posted August 29, 2006 I can definitely see how "You'll end up in jail" could sound like "You'll land up in jail." Well, there's Hammerstein and Kern in "Ol' Man River""You get a little drunk and you lands in jail" There may be a Prepositional Crisis going on. Here's a quote from the NB column in the latest Times Literary Supplement (August 18 & 25): Save Our Prepositions: a new campaign. We have already mentioned the difficulty with British public has with the verb to comprise, and the stray prepositions it tends to attract, principally "of" ... In the Observer recently, the actor Bill Nighy remarked: "If you spend your life saying, 'I'm bored with that,' and then a whole generation starts saying, 'I'm bored of it,' it does get to you." We're bored of it, too. Key in "bored of" to the Observer website, and you get 123 returns.The preposition crisis divides into two: the augmented and the diminished. The first category includes meet with and head up .. and the admittedly charming beat up on ... The diminshed category inclues the meagre American show for the full-bodied British show up -- "he was expected but didn't show" -- and the similar walk for "walk out." Link to comment
rg Posted August 29, 2006 Share Posted August 29, 2006 yesterday's local radio station noted that by renaming the u.s.t.a. complex in flushing meadow for billie jean king, the tennis star was getting her 'just desserts' - hrrmmmmm. Link to comment
Ed Waffle Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 bart, in August, (I am just catching up a bit) wrote: Tudor's The Leaves are FALLING. Typing the quoted phrase into Google one gets a number of hits. The first is from the website of the New England Ballet Company; the seventh is bart's post on ballettalk. Link to comment
Mme. Hermine Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 ok i have to admit this one. my own personal 'eggcorn' came the first time i saw balanchine's midsummer night's dream, in a song by the chorus in which, as i now know, they sing, "hand in hand with fairy grace we will sing and bless this place'. however at the time i was convinced that the san francisco ballet had done an endorsement deal, as my mind kept hearing 'hand in hand with fairy grace, we will sing of Nestle's Place". seriously! Link to comment
Treefrog Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 I have a coworker from Chicago who introduced "I'm waiting on Joe to give me that info" instead of "I'm waiting for Joe to give me that info," Here in Chicago, we also say, "I'm going to the store. Do you want to go with?" I say this blushingly as an East Coast emigrant, as I use it occasionally myself. My own personal pet peeve: Nu-kyu-lerr for nu-clee-err. Even the presidents can't get that one right! And then there was the fifth grade pal of mine who said, "Ee-or-ka!" when he got something right. It took us a while to figure out he meant "Eureka!" Link to comment
carbro Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 My own personal pet peeve: Nu-kyu-lerr for nu-clee-err. Even the presidents can't get that one right! Even a president who got his degree in it from the US Naval Academy! But the current president had a "slip" several weeks ago, and I did the audio equivalent of a double take. I swear, I swear I heard George W. Bush say NOO-klee-ur. Honest! I did! And the worst part? It sounded so wrong! Link to comment
dirac Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 Yes, ‘nucular’ has been around for quite some time – anyone who catches ‘The China Syndrome’ will note that Michael Douglas says it that way, and I’m sure it was in circulation well before that. It’s entirely possible that if enough people keep saying it and it becomes widespread among the educated, the usage may very well become standard eventually – such things have happened before. This doesn’t count as an eggcorn, but over time an interesting thing happened to the phrase ‘eat your cake and have it too.’ It’s now nearly always rendered as ‘have your cake and eat it too’ in spite of the fact that the latter doesn’t really make sense. Link to comment
Mel Johnson Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 NOO-kyu-ler for NOO-klee-ur is a spoonerism within one word, not really an eggcorn. Link to comment
Mme. Hermine Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 you can contribute to an eggcorn database! http://eggcorns.lascribe.net/ Link to comment
bart Posted November 8, 2006 Share Posted November 8, 2006 Re spoonerisms. Just overheard a conversation in which three different people resorted to the pronunciation MIS-CHEE-VEE-USS. Link to comment
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