coffin pronunciation

Dennis Preston preston at MSU.EDU
Fri Mar 14 14:23:43 UTC 2008


Lynne,

It's interesting that you cite "calling hours" as the term
accompanying the preferred in-group items (as a replacement for
"wake"). Is "visiting hours" also "unprofessional"?

dInIs

>---------------------- Information from the mail header
>-----------------------
>Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
>Poster:       Laurence Horn <laurence.horn at YALE.EDU>
>Subject:      Re: coffin pronunciation
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>At 9:36 AM -0400 3/14/08, Lynne Murphy wrote:
>>Raised in a funeral home in NYS, therefore I pronounce it 'casket'.
>>('Coffin' is for people who say 'undertaker', 'funeral parlor' and 'wake'
>>instead of 'funeral director', 'funeral home' and 'calling hours'.)
>
>Ah, but
>"It wasn't the cough that carried him, but the coffin they carried him off in"
>doesn't work nearly as well when you replace it with "casket"
>
>LH
>
>>
>>But I also have a caught/cot distinction and would use the open-o when
>>obnoxiously 'correcting' people on this matter--which I felt much need to
>>do as a child...
>>
>>Lynne
>>
>>--On Thursday, March 13, 2008 1:53 pm -0500 Matthew Gordon
>><gordonmj at MISSOURI.EDU> wrote:
>>
>>>I was listening to a podcast featuring 2 thirty-something New Yorkers. One
>>>of them pronounced 'coffin' with an open-o, and the other ridiculed him,
>>>saying something about how it's not 'coughin'.
>>>
>>>My question for those of you who maintain the distinction between /a/ and
>>>open-o: Do you all have /a/ for 'coffin'? I'm wondering whether this is
>>>another example of a word that varies in its phonemic assignment.
>>
>>
>>
>>Dr M Lynne Murphy
>>Senior Lecturer in Linguistics and English Language
>>Arts B135
>>University of Sussex
>>Brighton BN1 9QN
>>
>>phone: +44-(0)1273-678844
>>http://separatedbyacommonlanguage.blogspot.com
>>
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>
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>The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org


--
Dennis R. Preston
University Distinguished Professor
Department of English
Morrill Hall 15-C
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48864 USA

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