Post-opt for Post-op

Mark Mandel Mark.A.Mandel at GMAIL.COM
Tue Nov 10 03:10:42 UTC 2009


I don't think so. What does "post-opt" gain over "post-op" in apparent
meaningfulness? The definition, from Chris Waigl's Eggcorn Database
and Forum site (http://eggcorns.lascribe.net/about/):

=====
Not every homophone substitution is an eggcorn. The crucial element is
that the new form makes sense: for anyone except lexicographers or
other people trained in etymology, more sense than the original form
in many cases. The more brazen among the eggcorn users may eloquently
defend and explain the underlying semantics (metaphors, metonymies,
convincing but erroneous accounts of the supposed history). Thus,
thumbs down for "definately" and "they’re / there house" (not
eggcorns, just phonetic misspellings: the non-standard versions don’t
make any more sense than, or reinterpret the meaning of the standard
versions), but thumbs up for "for all intensive purposes".
=====

On Mon, Nov 9, 2009 at 8:23 PM, Michael Sheehan <wordmall at aol.com> wrote:
>
> Found on a Face Book page: Â "Great post-opt appointment with the
> surgeon." Â Eggcorn?
>
> Mike Sheehan
> seniors.tcnet.org

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