Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Pronunciation watch
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Happened this morning for the first time on R4's Book of the week - it's all about recusants which Ian McDiarmid insists on pronouncing reCUSant instead of ˈrɛkjᵿz(ə)nt.
Matbe he's thinking of refusenik?
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Originally posted by jean View PostMaybe he's thinking of refusenik?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Anomalous, yes - especially as accuser seems to predate it.
From the examples the OED gives, it was coined for the prevailing circumstances right enough - its use spread to other contexts, but has now narrowed to the orignal meaning again.
(The other day I was at a concert of music likely to have sung in the C16 and C17 in one of the great recusant Catholic houses in Lancashire, which preserves some very interesting musical settings among the commonplaces of a manuscript book known as the Great Hodge Podge.)
.Last edited by jean; 15-10-15, 15:00.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt does seem to be an anomalous form, though, compared with excuse, accuse. Why not reCUSer, I wonder? It looks like a French form but I don't think it was used commonly, and nothing earlier than the 16th c. in English, so presumably coined for the prevailing circumstances. (Sorry, not pronunciation but pedantry)
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Originally posted by jean View PostBecause the verb itself wasn't used in English, I suppose - we only wanted the present participle.
The first spelling the OED gives is recusaunt, which looks a bit French.
On the pronunciation: Brit. /ˈrɛkjᵿz(ə)nt/ , U.S. /rəˈkjuznt/ ...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt was the nouns recusance and recusancy (and recusant) which didn't occur until the 16th c.
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Originally posted by decantor View PostIt had always been my belief - on no evidence whatsoever, of course - that RECUSANT was deliberately adopted (or even coined) as a calculated parallel to PROTESTANT. That would explain both the morphology and the historical timing of its appearance. (Just an idea!)It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by decantor View PostIt had always been my belief - on no evidence whatsoever, of course -
'Belief' of course requires an element of faith alongside, hopefully, a significant degree of logical thinking.
Lord knows I'm no language scholar, but your belief regarding the correct pronunciation of 'recusant' certainly has a very simple and straightforward logic on its side!
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Originally posted by decantor View PostIt had always been my belief...that RECUSANT was deliberately adopted (or even coined) as a calculated parallel to PROTESTANT.
1552–3 Act 7 Edw. VI c. 4 §2 The Certificate of Recusauntes made by any of the said Archebyshoppes.
The only problem is that though Protestant is earlier, it was first used only of Germany, and it is doubtful how protestant the English church thought itself to be as early as the reign of Edward VI.
The first citation that seems to refer to England rather than Germany is this:
1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. K2, I must say to the shame of vs Protestants, if good workes may merit heauen, they [sc. the Romans] do them, we talke of them.
(So much for those high Anglicans who think the English church never thought of itself as Protestant at all!)
I'd also never registered the use of recuse as a verb.
.Last edited by jean; 16-10-15, 09:05.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThe only problem is that though Protestant is earlier, it was first used only of Germany, and it is doubtful how protestant the English church thought itself to be as early as the reign of Edward VI.
Even if PROTESTANT was used primarily of Lutherans, the objection above is not quite fatal to my hypothesis, I feel. The context for the neologism might be: "THEY have their Protestants, WE have our Recusants." And yes, I too was surprised to find that the verb RECUSE once had its place in our lexicon.
(My apologies for prolonging an off-topic theme)
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1. The regional pronunciation of the word "says":
Is it ever right for this word to be pronounced in any way other than "sez"? Some people living north of Watford pronounce it as "sez" and some pronounce it as in "baize".
2. The use of inverted commas/quotation marks:
Historically, I have preferred to use double quotation marks for (a) quotations and (b) delineation of words or phrases from other parts of a sentence or clause even though instinct tells me in the case of (b) that single marks should be used. Here is a (double) example: "The pronunciation of the word "says"". But is there an absolute right or wrong here?
3. Choosing to be wrong as an individual "style":
If one prefers to have one or two aspects of writing that are in principle absolutely wrong, can this ever be acceptable on the grounds that it is an individual's chosen style? For example, can one ever really put forward convincingly the "I know that in strict terms it is wrong - but it never had an adverse impact on ee cummings etc" sort of argument?
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View Post
2. The use of inverted commas/quotation marks:
Historically, I have preferred to use double quotation marks for (a) quotations and (b) delineation of words or phrases from other parts of a sentence or clause even though instinct tells me in the case of (b) that single marks should be used. Here is a (double) example: "The pronunciation of the word "says"". But is there an absolute right or wrong here?
... different editors / publishers will have different house style guides. Hart's Rules for Compositors and Readers at the University Press Oxford advises :
'Single marks are to be used for a first quotation; then double for a quotation within a quotation. If there should be yet another quotation within the second quotation it is necessary to revert to single quotation marks.'
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