"posh"
Mark_Mandel at DRAGONSYS.COM
Mark_Mandel at DRAGONSYS.COM
Tue Mar 14 17:26:57 UTC 2000
Gerald Cohen <gcohen at UMR.EDU> writes:
>>>>>
This word is treated in an article entitled "Posh," by J. Peter Maher,
in _Studies in Slang_, part 1 (=Forum Anglicum, vol. 14/1), edited by
Gerald Leonard Cohen, Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1985., pp.
64-65.-----Maher derives "posh" from "poshed," which he suggests derives
from "polished." He writes in part:
"Everyone familiar with London speech knows that the _l_ of words
like _milk_, _I'll_, _well_ and such are "gulped"; after vowels the true
London accent pronounces _l_'s much like the _oo_ of _moon_. When the
vowel before the _l_ is an _o_, the effect is to blend the two together.
No distinct _l_ results. Londoners, in particular the Cockneys, pronounce
the verb _to polish _ as _pawsh_, to write it in an American fashion, or
_posh_ to give it the authentic, if non-standard, British spelling. This
verb is fully conjugated: "I, you, we, they _posh_; he, she, it _poshes_;
it is, they are _poshed_ types, or live in _posh(ed)_ digs."
<<<<<
Even intervocalically?
Data, anyone?
-- Mark
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