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Questiongate
Why have the media got this obsession of attaching the word "gate" onto news stories? Camillagate, Dianagate, cheriegate, and many many more,
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.yeah and if Bill and Melinda every divorce publicly amd messily, it'll be Bill and Melinda Gatesgate
as you know I can flip into ponce-mode instantly. Linguists call tacking things onto words, morphemes and if you do it alot and it sounds ok, it is a strongly bound morpheme. -s is a strongly bound morpheme in English to pluralise words whereas -en is stronger in Dutch.
[Honestly people get paid money for writing this sort of c++p] So your question can be recast (in best managementspeak) into Why is -gate a strongly bound morpheme? I think it is because it has a g and t sound which is uncommon - goat and gut spring to mind but not much else - with a long vowel. - gute, geight and gart just arent English words. But that's just opinion.
NOW..... i thought your question was gonna be a MUCH more interesting - why are some streets called gates when there isnt a gate on them?
and THAT is because up t north, the Icelandic gata - and you can spit over everyone when you're sayng this word because it is a gutteral ch as in loch - or the gh in ghayn if you speak Arabic - gata means road.
Ha! amazing what comes up on AB innit?
PP
Yes, the many scandals involving Gareth Gates will be called... oh well, never mind.
The first and most famous as Quizmonster says was Watergate. (A watergate was once an entry to a building from the water - I think there's still one at the Tower of London, on the Thames.) I have been trying to remember what the second one was - ie the first to have 'gate' tacked on to it - but I can't.
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