Comment on Wendnesday
GandalftheBlack@feddit.org 1 day agoWe started pronouncing it Febuary instead of February to match January. From Wiktionary:
The pronunciation of the first r as /j/ has come about by dissimilation and analogy with January. In the UK pronunciation /ˈfɛb.ɹi/ (*Febry) the sequence /ɹə.ɹi/ in /ˈfɛb.ɹə.ɹi/ (*Febrery) is simplified to /ɹi/ by haplology.
Also, we should bring back the Old English solmōnaþ (“mud month”).
hakase@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
This type of analogy is specifically called series contamination, where items that frequently are pronounced together in a series affect each other. Also happened in proto-Germanic with the ‘n’ in ten, from the ‘n’ in nine (and in the opposite direction of Latin novem and decem; cf. nonus “ninth” to see the original ‘n’).
Also probably at least partially responsible for the common American pronunciation of Wednesday, based on Tuesday.
GandalftheBlack@feddit.org 1 day ago
Is the n in Germanic words for ten not just a reflex of m in PIE *dekm̥t?
hakase@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
Ah, yeah, quite possibly, good catch. I suppose it could be either assimilation to final -t before it dropped off, or final nasal merger to -n, a la Greek. I’ll check and report back.