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proper nouns

Fun Facts About English #87 – Capitonyms

11/05/2020 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing capitonyms

A capitonym is a word that changes its nuance, meaning, and sometimes pronunciation when it’s capitalized; capitalization being applied due to one form being a proper noun, such as Bill/bill, or an eponym, such as Augustus/august. Some capitonyms are homonyms (Rose/rose), and others can be heteronyms (Polish/polish, Tangier/tangier) where pronunciation changes accordingly. The word capitonym is a portmanteau of the word capital with the suffix -onym.

Besides the list of first names above, last names that are capitonyms often fall in the realms of labor, colors, and animals, like baker, cook, farmer, brown, white, green, wolf, fox, and parrot. When first meeting people with such surnames, best to spare them your witticism.

Capitonyms may or may not be etymologically related in their capitalized and un-capitalized forms. The month of May and the verb may don’t share an etymology, whereas Catholic and catholic both derive from a Greek adjective meaning “universal.”

Capital letters can be used to differentiate a set of objects or people and an example of that set, like a moon and the Moon, a dad and Dad, or a bible and the Bible.

Religious contexts have very specific rules for capital spelling. The general word god is capitalized to God when referring to the deity of monotheistic religions. When referencing said deities, common pronouns like me, mine, you, and yours are usually capitalized as well. Within the liturgy, there is Mass as opposed to physical mass, and church denoting a building compared to Church when referring to members of a religious group. In the same lofty vein, words carrying a meaning of transcendence, religious or secular, are often capitalized, such as Truth, Beauty, and Justice.

Because political parties are often named after political philosophies, capital letters differentiate one who supports a philosophy, such as a conservative believing in a philosophy of conservatism, and one who claims herself a Conservative in support of the Conservative Party.

Finally, there’s one pesky little glitch in the English scheme to differentiate capitonyms: the beginning of a sentence. Consider the mental sort and the necessity of context and punctuation when reading these examples:

  • Bill the patient, please.
  • Turkey requires a visa.
  • Rusty waters plants.
  • Crystal is clearly delicate.
  • Nice winters are mild compared to Paris.
  • Cook wages war in court.
  • Iris blossoms on the piano.
  • Pat the dog.
  • Will Will?
  • March!
  • Randy?

If you enjoyed this post, you might also be interested in reading about palindromes, the conundrum with contronyms, or why the word widow is unique among gender-specific nouns!

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Donald's English Classroom

Stories for Young Readers is a graded textbook series for students studying English as a second language (ESL/EFL). The series presents English in clear, grammatically simple, and direct language. Most importantly, the textbooks have been designed to extend students’ skills and interest in developing their ability to communicate in English. Visit Donald’s English Classroom for pdf downloads, or purchase through the Kinney Brothers Publishing website!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: capitalization, capitonyms, Donald’s English Classroom, english language, etymology, grammar rules, heteronyms, homonyms, kinney brothers publishing, language learning, language nuances, political capitalization, pronunciation, proper nouns, religious capitalization, word meaning

Fun Facts About English #30 – Monosyllabic Words

11/08/2019 by admin

Fun Facts About English 30 Kinney Brothers Publishing

A list of 9,123 English monosyllabic words published in 1957 includes three ten-letter words: scraunched, scroonched, and squirreled. Other sources include words as long or longer though some are questionable on the grounds of spelling, pronunciation, archaic status, being nonstandard, a proper noun, loanword, or nonce word.

Nine-letter monosyllables are scratched, screeched, scrounged, squelched, straights, and strengths.

Archaic

The past tense ending -ed and the archaic second-person singular ending -st can be combined into -edst. While this ending is usually pronounced as a separate syllable from the verb stem, it may be abbreviated -‘dst to indicate elision. Examples include scratch’dst and stretch’dst, each of which has one syllable spelled with ten letters plus an apostrophe.

Fun Facts About English Kinney Brother Publishing

Nonstandard

Onomatopoeic monosyllables may be extended without limit to represent a long, drawn-out sound or utterance. For example, Yann Martel’s 1995 novel Self includes a 45-letter Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh and a 35-letter Ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooh.

Proper Nouns

Some nine-letter proper names remain monosyllabic when adding a tenth letter and apostrophe to form the possessive:

  • Laugharne’s /ˈlɑːrnz/
  • Scoughall’s /ˈskoʊlz/

Nonce Words

A nonce word is a word created for a single occasion to solve an immediate problem of communication, i.e., “for the nonce” or this once. Some nonce words may be essentially meaningless, but they are useful for exactly that reason. For example, the single-syllable word wug was invented by researchers to be used in exercises in child language testing as a word children would not be familiar with.

The poem “Jabberwocky,” by Lewis Carroll, is full of nonce words, with two of them, chortle and galumphing, entering into common use. James Joyce’s 1939 novel, Finnegans Wake, used the monosyllabic quark as a nonce word. Physicist Murray Gell-Mann adopted the word in the 1960s as the name of a subatomic particle.

Click on these links to read about the longest word with no vowels, the word with the most consecutive vowels, or the longest word without a repeating letter!

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Donald's English Classroom

A good set of flash cards is worth its weight in gold! Donald’s English Classroom has a wealth of flash card sets for your vocabulary-building activities! Looking for a refresh on your flash card games and exercises? Check out 41 Flash Card Activities that you can start using today!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: 9-letter monosyllables, archaic forms, Donald's English Classroom, English monosyllabic words, fun facts about english, kinney brothers publishing, language trivia, linguistic exploration, nonce words, nonstandard extensions, proper nouns

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