Sukosi

Jerome Foster funex79 at CHARTER.NET
Sat Aug 21 22:59:58 UTC 2004


The use of "skosh' may have started after WWII with people who had been in
Japan but I know for sure it was used after Korea where I picked it up. And
sometime in the 60's, I believe, Levi's or another manufacturer of jeans,
advertised a new style with skosh more room in the seat" for older
customers.

Jerome Foster


.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dennis R. Preston" <preston at MSU.EDU>
To: <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2004 3:25 PM
Subject: Sukosi


> ---------------------- Information from the mail
header -----------------------
> Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster:       "Dennis R. Preston" <preston at MSU.EDU>
> Subject:      Sukosi
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
>
> In a current TV ad a guy who has lost more in the market than he
> would like to admit tells his wife that he has lost some, a little,
> etc... and then he says he has lost a "skowsh" ("scowsh"?) /skosh/,
> the vowel of "boat". The etymology of this seems crystal clear to me;
> it is surely from Japanese "sukosi" ("sukoshi" for those who don't
> like phonemic spelling), meaning a tad, a a little, etc.... (The
> monosyllabic English pronunciation falls out directly from Japanese
> vowel devoicing, which is heard as "nothing" by English speakers, in
> the first syllable and the last. High vowels are "devoiced" between
> two voiceless consonants or between a voiceless consonant and pause,
> yielding /skosh/ from /sukoshi/.)
>
> But that's enough phonology (which never seems to get me anywhere anyhow.)
>
> When did this item enter English? Is it a WWII, Korean War, or later
> (or earlier) loan? DARE doesn't have it (as expected, since I don't
> suspect it's regional), and I can't find it in other dictionaries
> (and I don't know how to spell it in English anyhow, which makes it
> tough to look up).
>
> dInIs
>
> --
> Dennis R. Preston
> University Distinguished Professor of Linguistics
> Department of Linguistics and Germanic, Slavic, Asian, and African
Languages
> A-740 Wells Hall
> Michigan State University
> East Lansing, MI 48824
> Phone: (517) 432-3099
> Fax: (517) 432-2736
> preston at msu.edu
>



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