Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
Donkey and Monkey
The word Donkey is prenounced...
DON- KEY
Yet the word Monkey is prenounced..
MUN-KEY
Why is this?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by doomey!. 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.Quizmonster I presume it came into English (I mean like English English) straight from French... Doesn't Pope write about 'Great Anna whom three realms obey/ dost sometimes counsel take and sometimes tea'?
(By contrast the Scots have McGonagall and his silvery Tay...)
But I wonder how the spelling tea rather than tee came about.
Pope's Rape Of The Lock - which you quote - first saw the light of day in 1712, so the 'old' pronunciation was still going strong then.
The 'tay' pronunciation was brought to Europe by Dutch traders and it is still thus used by their compatriots, as well as the French, Germans, Spanish, Italians, Swedish etc.
I don't doubt the change was part of the Great Vowel Shift, though most of its changes had taken place long before.
not so sure about the vowel shift, which I thought was done and dusted by 1600 at the latest in English... as I recall, sea was once pronounced a bit more like say, and changed; but I think tea just mutated independently. I haven't been able to pin down changes in the spelling, so I don't know if it was related to the pronunciation change.
Sorry doomey, getting a bit off topic here, but as a rule, English spellings may reflect old pronunciations, or new ones, or the spellings in the language the words were taken from, or just lousy spelling by the compilers of dictionaries... which is to say, no rule at all really...
As I said in my final sentence above, the major effects of the Vowel Shift had taken places ages earlier. I was just about prepared to let 'tea' be a last wag of its tail, as it were! You could well be right, however, about the independent mutation.