malachy, malaky, malarkey?

Tom Zurinskas truespel at HOTMAIL.COM
Sat Sep 29 16:12:17 UTC 2007


I wonder about the relationship of stress to double consonants (apart from the silent e rule).  Which spelling of the nonsense words below 1, 2, or 3 would be the one that most assume stress would be on the SECOND syllable: .  Similarity to any tradword is unintentional.

1 tabat
2 tabbat
3 tabatt

1 fecef
2 feccef
3 feceff

1 pidip
2 piddip
3 pidipp

1 lofol
2 loffol
3 lofoll

1 sugus
2 suggus
3 suguss

1 ralar
2 rallar
3 ralarr

1 pemep
2 pemmep
3 pemepp

1 rinir
2 rinnir
3 rinirr

1 nopon
2 noppon
3 noponn

1 murur
2 murrur
3 mururr

1 basab
2 bassab
3 basabb

1 metem
2 mettem
3 metemm

Tom Zurinskas, USA - CT20, TN3, NJ33, FL5+
See truespel.com - and the 4 truespel books plus "Occasional Poems" at authorhouse.com.




> Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2007 07:11:34 -0400
> From: goranson at DUKE.EDU
> Subject: malachy, malaky, malarkey?
> To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
>
> ---------------------- Information from the mail header -----------------------
> Sender: American Dialect Society
> Poster: Stephen Goranson
> Subject: malachy, malaky, malarkey?
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> I know that several of you are quite familiar with the work of Peter Tamony.
> I've read his "Malarkey: TAD, and Its San Francisco Roots." Western Folklore
> 33.2 April 1974 pp.158-62 (available on JSTOR and reprinted in McLain). And I
> checked Peter Tamony: Word Man of San Francisco's Mission by Marjorie McLain
> (1986); A TAD Lexicon, Leonard Zwilling (1993); The Tamony FS, Maledicta 7?
> [that number from memory]; and TAD: A Collection of Cartoons by Thomas
> Aloysius
> Dorgan 1877-1929, published by The Museum of Cartoon Art.
>
> There's no doubt that TAD and Tamony have lots of insight into slang.
> Yet, if I
> may say so, I'm not sure the evidence for the origin of malarkey is entirely
> secure or stringent. It may well seem temerarious or a long shot to suggest an
> alternate possiblility, but here goes, with the hope that collaborative
> research may help, whatever the origin turns out to be, whether a boastful
> oyster shucker, Jerry Mullarkey [sic] or otherwise.
>
> Mullarkey might have become malarkey, but the link seems tenuous.
> Tamony did not
> present direct evidence. Did TAD ever discuss this? OED comments that "no
> connection is known" between Mullarkey and malarkey. OED notes a 1922 TAD
> cartoon with Milarkey [sic], "presumably a fictitous place name," presumably
> not relevant. OED also notes the--I'd say quite unlikely--proposed Greek
> origin.
>
> The OED definition and first three cites:
>
> Humbug, bunkum, nonsense; a palaver, racket. (Usually of an event, activity,
> idea, utterance, etc., seen as trivial, misleading, or not worthy of
> consideration.)
>
> 1924 T. A. DORGAN in Capital Times (Madison, Wisconsin) 2 Apr. 6 Malachy--you
> said it. 1929 J. P. MCEVOY Hollywood Girl vii. 102 It's a wonder you
> notice me,
> I told him. That's a lot of malaky, says he. 1930 Variety 29 Oct., The song is
> ended but the Malarkey lingers on.
>
> The full 1929 title is Simon and Schuster Present The Super-Colossal Wonder
> Picture Epoch of This or Any Other Century, Hollywood Girl.
>
> Does anyone have a copy of the 1924 cartoon? I'd be grateful for a copy or a
> description. Does anyone have additional pre-1930 citations?
>
> If the first spelling is Malachy and the second is Malaky--both without an r,
> perhaps we should consider possible origin with that spelling. There is a
> well-known medieval Irish Archbishop Malachy. Bernard of Clairvaux wrote his
> biography. Eventually a prophecy in Latin, claiming to predict the next 111 or
> 112 popes, was attributed to (St.) Malachy. These prophecies are examined at
> least when each new pope takes office, as in 1922. Many regard these
> prophecies
> as malarkey.
>
> Stephen Goranson
> http://www.duke.edu/~goranson
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org

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