mints pie? axe of God? religious tracks? Prints of Wales?

Roger Shuy rshuy at MONTANA.COM
Sat May 7 21:31:29 UTC 2005


on 5/7/05 2:30 PM, Laurence Horn at laurence.horn at YALE.EDU wrote:

> ---------------------- Information from the mail header
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> Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster:       Laurence Horn <laurence.horn at YALE.EDU>
> Subject:      Re: mints pie? axe of God? religious tracks? Prints of Wales?
>
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> At 2:01 PM -0400 5/7/05, RonButters at AOL.COM wrote:
>> I searched on Google for "mints pie" and found that John Lennon (?) once used
>> this spelling for a Christmas pie, but I'm not sure if he was making a pun or
>> not. I'm interested in any eggcorns that use mints/mince, prints/prince,
>> acts/axe, tracks/tracts, etc. There are several commerical names that use the
>> prints/prince puns, but these of course are not eggcorns.
>
> cf. "A good doctor always has a lot of patience."
>
> Larry
>
I  wonder if any other old guy like me had the same example used when a
student in phonetics class. My teacher taught us that there was a big
differnce in juncture between "hot mince pie" and "hot mint spy."
(stretching things quite a bit to visualize a sweaty spy hiding behind the
bushes and watching the US Mint).  Frankly, I wasn't very good at hearing
it.
roger



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