coincidentally = ironically = also
Benjamin Zimmer
bgzimmer at BABEL.LING.UPENN.EDU
Thu Feb 1 18:38:56 UTC 2007
On 2/1/07, Charles Doyle <cdoyle at uga.edu> wrote:
>
> >From: Jonathan Lighter <wuxxmupp2000 at YAHOO.COM>
> >
> >Discovered, as usual, by chance:
> >
> > 1999 _Novels for Students_ (ed. D. A. Stanley) (Detroit: Gale) VII 53:
> > Though written in 1891, _Billy Budd_...was first published posthumously
> > in 1924. Coincidentally, the English composer Edward Benjamin Britten,
> > aided by E. M. Forster's libretto, made _Billy Budd_ into an opera in 1951.
>
> Or is "coincidentally" simply used in place of (perhaps confused with) "incidentally"?
This follows the well-known rule that a word sounds fancier with extra
syllables in front. Cf. "epicenter" = 'center', "penultimate" =
'ultimate', "quintessential" = 'essential', "juxtaposition" =
'position', etc.
http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0509c&L=ads-l&D=0&P=20099
--Ben Zimmer
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