eggcorn

Laurence Horn laurence.horn at YALE.EDU
Thu May 12 01:04:01 UTC 2005


>At 7:28 PM -0400 5/11/05, Douglas G. Wilson wrote:
>>>This merging of tense and lax (to lax) before L is common in Ohio
>>>too.  Thus, i > I, e > E, and u/o > U/^ (wedge).  A common sign around here
>>>in SE Ohio is "For Sell."  I haven't seen other words respelled to match
>>>sound--yet.  (Only thus would it be an eggcorn, right?)
>>
>>Pittsburgh also has this feature. Also before /gl/ apparently. "Steelers"
>>sounds like "Stillers". "Legal" sounds like "liggle". "Swissvale" sounds
>>like "Swissvell". The video rental chain associated with the Giant Eagle
>>(sounds like "Jye-Niggle" sometimes) supermarket chain is named "Iggle
>>Video" and this is how it is spelled (on the storefront for example).
>>
>>-- Doug Wilson
>
>And just as the Pittsburgh Steelers are widely known as the
>"Stillers", so too the Eagles

Oops.  I buried and obliterated the lead, which is that it's the
*Philadelphia* Eagles that are affectionately known as the Iggles,
the point being that for at least some brotherly lovin' speakers the
laxing extends along the turnpike several hundred miles east from
Pittsburgh.

>are known far and wide as the "Iggles".
>(Both shibboleths are exploited, for example, on ESPN SportsCenter.)
>I knew the laxing occurred before /l/ and /g/, but I didn't realize
>it's only before /g/ followed by /l/.  That makes more sense.
>
>Larry



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