ChatterBank0 min ago
Sqad ... U And Non U Revisited
15 Answers
Is "u" becoming obsolete?
The setter of yesterday's Guardian crossword was called "Qaos"
So words with a "q" not followed by a "u" ...
Qatar
Qantas
Qaos
Sqad
The setter of yesterday's Guardian crossword was called "Qaos"
So words with a "q" not followed by a "u" ...
Qatar
Qantas
Qaos
Sqad
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by joggerjayne. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As I suspected, out of a list of 71 words used in English speaking countries that do not have q followed by u, "67 are loanwords from other languages... predominantly Arabic..." Of the remaining words, two are scientific descriptors and the forced QWERTY, which, in my opinion, isn't really a word in the normative, but rather an euphemism adopted for a specific useage. It's neither noun, verb, adverb or adjective...
Also helpful in this discussion is this from English Language and Useage :
"The early Latins had three different letters for the [k] sound: C K Q. However, they only had one letter to represent the [u] and [w] (or [v]) sounds: V. It became customary to write the sequence [kw] (which is fairly common in Latin) as QV and all other instances of [k] as C. (K dropped out of use in most words.) This usage survived into most other European languages that were written with the Latin alphabet, though eventually the letter V was differentiated into U and V, and the accepted spelling of [kw] became QU.
Words spelled with Q without U are generally more recent additions to English, and often represent words borrowed from Semitic languages. Those languages are written with non-Latin alphabets and often have more than one [k]-like sound. When transliterating these scripts, K is usually used for [k], and Q for another sound such as [q], a uvular, "guttural k". In romanizations of Chinese Q is also used for a sound similar to the English "ch"."
Also helpful in this discussion is this from English Language and Useage :
"The early Latins had three different letters for the [k] sound: C K Q. However, they only had one letter to represent the [u] and [w] (or [v]) sounds: V. It became customary to write the sequence [kw] (which is fairly common in Latin) as QV and all other instances of [k] as C. (K dropped out of use in most words.) This usage survived into most other European languages that were written with the Latin alphabet, though eventually the letter V was differentiated into U and V, and the accepted spelling of [kw] became QU.
Words spelled with Q without U are generally more recent additions to English, and often represent words borrowed from Semitic languages. Those languages are written with non-Latin alphabets and often have more than one [k]-like sound. When transliterating these scripts, K is usually used for [k], and Q for another sound such as [q], a uvular, "guttural k". In romanizations of Chinese Q is also used for a sound similar to the English "ch"."
In addition to hopkirk's list, there were these back in the day:
Aeroflot - Aeroflop
TWA - we, here in the U.S. had it as Try Walking Awhile
AA (Code for American, Alaska, Ansett) Always came out "Abort... Abort"...
Air Wisconsin (still in business) 'Ere we're crashing
Arrow Air (What else/) Error Air
Delta - Do Every Little Thing Awful
Frontier - (Sadly now one... first airline I flew for) Front & Rear
NorthWest (Now Delta North) NorthWorst
Qantas - (Previously described, but here) Quite A Nice Trip - Any Survivors?
Aeroflot - Aeroflop
TWA - we, here in the U.S. had it as Try Walking Awhile
AA (Code for American, Alaska, Ansett) Always came out "Abort... Abort"...
Air Wisconsin (still in business) 'Ere we're crashing
Arrow Air (What else/) Error Air
Delta - Do Every Little Thing Awful
Frontier - (Sadly now one... first airline I flew for) Front & Rear
NorthWest (Now Delta North) NorthWorst
Qantas - (Previously described, but here) Quite A Nice Trip - Any Survivors?
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