On English Homophones. Bridges Robert

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Название On English Homophones
Автор произведения Bridges Robert
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in (v.)].

      stick (s.), stick (v.).

      stock (stone), stock (in trade), &c.

      strut (a support), strut (to walk).

      share (division), share (plough).

      sheet (sail and clew), sheet (-anchor).

      shear (clip), sheer (clear), sheer off (deviate).

      tack (various), tack (naut.).

      ton, tun.

      wage (earnings), wage (of war).

      IX. The following words were not admitted into the main class chiefly on account of their unimportance

      ah! are.

      arse, ass.

      ask, aske (newt)

      ayah, ire.

      bah! bar, baa.

      barb, barb (horse).

      bask, basque.

      barn, barne = bairn.

      budge, budge (stuff).

      buff, buff.

      buffer, buffer.

      berg, burgh (suffixes).

      bin, bin = been.

      broke (v. of broke), broke (fr. break).

      broom, brume (fog).

      darn, darn.

      fizz, phiz.

      few, feu.

      forty, forte.

      hay, heigh!

      hem (sew), hem (v., haw).

      hollow, hollo (v.).

      inn, in.

      yawl (boat), yawl (howl).

      coup, coo.

      lamb, lam (bang).

      loaf, loaf (v. laufen).

      marry! marry (v.).

      nag (pony), nag (to gnaw), knag.

      nap (of cloth), nap (sleep).

      nay, neigh.

      oh! owe.

      ode, owed.

      oxide, ox-eyed.

      pax, packs.

      pants, pants (fr. pant).

      prose, pros (and cons).

      sink (var.), cinque.

      swayed, suede (kid).

      ternary, turnery.

      tea, tee (starting point).

      taw (to dress skins), taw (game, marbles), tore (fr. tear).

      cheap, cheep.

      tool, tulle,

      we! woe.

      ho! hoe.

      The facts of the case being now sufficiently supplied by the above list, I will put my attitude towards those facts in a logical sequence under separate statements, which thus isolated will, if examined one by one, avoid the confusion that their interdependence might otherwise occasion. The sequence is thus:

      1. Homophones are a nuisance.

      2. They are exceptionally frequent in English.

      3. They are self-destructive, and tend to become obsolete.

      4. This loss impoverishes the language.

      5. This impoverishment is now proceeding owing to the prevalence of the Southern English standard of speech.

      6. The mischief is being worsened and propagated by the phoneticians.

      7. The Southern English dialect has no claim to exclusive preference.

1. That homophones are a nuisance

      An objector who should plead that homophones are not a nuisance might allege the longevity of the Chinese language, composed, I believe, chiefly of homophones distinguished from each other by an accentuation which must be delicate difficult and precarious. I remember that Max Müller [1864] instanced a fictitious sentence

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      1

      Homophone is a Greek word meaning 'same-sounding', and before using the relative word in this double way I have preferred to make what may seem a needless explanation. It is convenient, for instance, to say that son and

1

Homophone is a Greek word meaning 'same-sounding', and before using the relative word in this double way I have preferred to make what may seem a needless explanation. It is convenient, for instance, to say that son and heir are both homophones, meaning that each belongs to that particular class of words which without context are of ambiguous signification: and it is convenient also to say that son and sun and heir and air are homophones without explaining that it is meant that they are mutually homophonous, which is evident. A physician congratulating a friend on the birth of his first-born might say, 'Now that you have a son and heir, see that he gets enough sun and air'.

2

Such words have no technical class-name; they are merely extreme examples of the ambiguity common to most words, which grows up naturally from divergence of meaning. True homophones are separate words which have, or have acquired, an illogical fortuitous identity.

3

It is probable that in Tyndal's time the awkwardness was not so glaring: for 'beam' as a ray of light seems to have developed its connexion with the eye since his date, in spite of his proverbial use of it in the other sense.

4

In Skeat's Etymological Dictionary there is a list of homonyms, that is words which are ambiguous to the eye by similar spellings, as homophones are to the ear by similar sounds: and that list, which includes obsolete words, has 1,600 items. 1,600 is the number of homophones which our list would show if they were all only doublets.

5

The following words in List 1 involve wr > w, write, wrach, wrap, wring, wrung, wreck, wrest, wreak, wrick.

6

Other similar words occurring in other sections are—awe, awl, ought, bawd, fought, gaud, gauze, haw, caw, cause, caught, lawn, paw, saw, sauce, sought, taut, caulk, stalk, alms, balm;—their correspondents being, oar, orle, ort (obs.), board, fort, gored, gores, hoar, core, cores, court, lorn, pore, sore, source, sort, tort, cork, stork, arms, barm.

7

Other similar proper names of species,