Celtic - pronounciation, please
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Celtic - pronounciation, please
A day late and a dollar short for St. Patrick's Day, but I've been curious about this.
I always thought that in the UK, they pronounced it "Keltic." But on our last trip to England, we heard someone on TV pronounce it "Seltic."
Is it commonly pronounced both ways?
I always thought that in the UK, they pronounced it "Keltic." But on our last trip to England, we heard someone on TV pronounce it "Seltic."
Is it commonly pronounced both ways?
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The Celts have always been Kelts. That's how the Greeks (from memory, Herodotus, but my Liddel and Scott is in storage) first spelt - and pronounced them 2,500 years ago. So the Celtic Sea is pronounced Keltic. And so on. There's only one exception.
The Glasgow football team is pronounced Seltic. There's no other occasion Celtic is so pronounced.
And even the football club isn't always Seltic. A decade or so, it was trounced 6-1 in a cuptie by no-hopers Inverness Caledonians.
Quick as a flash, the Sun's back page headline summed up the debacle. "Super Cally go balistic" it announced. "Celtic are atrocious".
No newspaper in the world comes within a mile of the Sun for great headlines. That has to in there with "Gotcha" and "Freddie Starr ate my hamster"
The Glasgow football team is pronounced Seltic. There's no other occasion Celtic is so pronounced.
And even the football club isn't always Seltic. A decade or so, it was trounced 6-1 in a cuptie by no-hopers Inverness Caledonians.
Quick as a flash, the Sun's back page headline summed up the debacle. "Super Cally go balistic" it announced. "Celtic are atrocious".
No newspaper in the world comes within a mile of the Sun for great headlines. That has to in there with "Gotcha" and "Freddie Starr ate my hamster"
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Loath as I am to correct flanner (and I shall resist the temptation to say anything about the Sun), I have a distinct memory that it was the local paper in Inverness that got there first - it wouldn't surprise me if they hadn't had it stored away for some time, just in case.
#6
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This "Keltic" business is a curious British affectation. In America we generally say "Seltic," both for the Boston Celtics and otherwise, following the normal rule: Greek words beginning ke-, ki- or ky- that came into English through Latin and had the initial kappa changed to a "c" are pronounced as if they began with an "s." Otherwise we would say "kentaur," "kinema," and "Kyprus."
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>Increasingly I think people use the K, but traditionally it was the S
Untrue actually. The truth is nobody really knows. The pagans insist it is a soft C but more often it's referred to as a hard C unless in reference to a sporting team.
Untrue actually. The truth is nobody really knows. The pagans insist it is a soft C but more often it's referred to as a hard C unless in reference to a sporting team.
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Possibly Glaswegian soccer fans are, on average, less prone to affectation than their compatriots. I would not find that altogether surprising.
The Oxford English Dictionary, for what it's worth, gives the "seltic" pronunciation first, then "keltic."
Flanneruk's reference to Herodotus is correct. (My Liddell and Scott is not in storage.)
The Oxford English Dictionary, for what it's worth, gives the "seltic" pronunciation first, then "keltic."
Flanneruk's reference to Herodotus is correct. (My Liddell and Scott is not in storage.)
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Right, let's get the important issue straight.
The match concerned took place on Feb 8, 2003: The Sun (but only in its Scottish edition, so Patrick's partly right) ran the headline on the morning of Feb 9. The Inverness Courier appears only twice a week.
Checking this, two other contenders for the greatest ever sporting headline cropped up:
The Sun's "Wenger’s wonga makes Bergkamp linger longer" isn't as good, really as the Mirror's effort when English "fans" smashed up half of Rotterdam: "Rotterdammerung". Sadly, the Mirror's subs decided this was over their readers' heads and spiked it.
None though, approach the immortal Johnner's cricket commentary on the BBC when Michael Holding was bowling to Peter Willey: "The bowler's Holding: the batsman's Willey"
Thank you, jahoulih for reminding me tactfully of Alice's (and her dad's) surname. Yes, "Keltic" may be an affectation. But when our papers produce headlines like that, and Beeb commentators don't incur Janet Jackson-style hand-wringing, I think we're allowed it.
The match concerned took place on Feb 8, 2003: The Sun (but only in its Scottish edition, so Patrick's partly right) ran the headline on the morning of Feb 9. The Inverness Courier appears only twice a week.
Checking this, two other contenders for the greatest ever sporting headline cropped up:
The Sun's "Wenger’s wonga makes Bergkamp linger longer" isn't as good, really as the Mirror's effort when English "fans" smashed up half of Rotterdam: "Rotterdammerung". Sadly, the Mirror's subs decided this was over their readers' heads and spiked it.
None though, approach the immortal Johnner's cricket commentary on the BBC when Michael Holding was bowling to Peter Willey: "The bowler's Holding: the batsman's Willey"
Thank you, jahoulih for reminding me tactfully of Alice's (and her dad's) surname. Yes, "Keltic" may be an affectation. But when our papers produce headlines like that, and Beeb commentators don't incur Janet Jackson-style hand-wringing, I think we're allowed it.
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Thanks, flanneruk. If it's "Keltic" you want, you're welcome to it.
Speaking of Alice's dad and his dictionary, you may already be familiar with this gem from Thomas Hardy:
http://www.richardwolf.de/latein/hardy.htm
Speaking of Alice's dad and his dictionary, you may already be familiar with this gem from Thomas Hardy:
http://www.richardwolf.de/latein/hardy.htm
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>><i>This "Keltic" business is a curious British affectation. In America we generally say "Seltic," both for the Boston Celtics and otherwise</i>.
This may be regional, because I live in the States and always hear it pronounced "Keltic," except when referring to the basketball team from Boston.
This may be regional, because I live in the States and always hear it pronounced "Keltic," except when referring to the basketball team from Boston.
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Well, if we really want to be pedantic, perhaps we could start by spelling pronunciation correctly. There's no o before the u.
The compact 2002 OED says that Celtic can be pronounced both ways but puts the K version first. It says that the origin is the Greek word, Keltoi.
Talking of Greek origins, I knew a very grand old lady who pronounced Cinema as Kinema.
The compact 2002 OED says that Celtic can be pronounced both ways but puts the K version first. It says that the origin is the Greek word, Keltoi.
Talking of Greek origins, I knew a very grand old lady who pronounced Cinema as Kinema.
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The "k" version seems to be on the march, on both sides of the Atlantic. My OED, with the "s" version first, is the 1989 edition. The 2001 Merriam-Webster gives the "k" version first.
I'll stick with Boston and Glasgow.
I'll stick with Boston and Glasgow.
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I've always been under the impression that it is pronounced Keltic unless you are talking about the two sports teams mentioned. I remember the reference to the Greek Keltoi (and the greeks did have an S sound - Sigma).
As a child I pronounced it Seltic once -- in front of a Welshman, who promptly corrected me. He said Seltic was a popular pronunciation in the 19th century, but Keltic is correct.
As a child I pronounced it Seltic once -- in front of a Welshman, who promptly corrected me. He said Seltic was a popular pronunciation in the 19th century, but Keltic is correct.
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Oldie
Many early cinemas or “picture houses” were actually styled Kinema – it would seem the correct phonetic of this then neologism was up for grabs.
Though this form soon disappeared from view it can still be found in deepest, darkest Lincolnshire at Woodhall Spa which still has “The Kinema In The Woods” – a cinema unique in the UK in that the projection comes from the REAR of the screen not from behind the audience in front of the screen. More info available at www.thekinemainthewoods.co.uk.
The whole experience of going to see a film there is a very refreshing change from the ubiquitous multi-plex replete with popcorn fights and ill-behaved teens.
Thread highjack over!
Dr D.
Many early cinemas or “picture houses” were actually styled Kinema – it would seem the correct phonetic of this then neologism was up for grabs.
Though this form soon disappeared from view it can still be found in deepest, darkest Lincolnshire at Woodhall Spa which still has “The Kinema In The Woods” – a cinema unique in the UK in that the projection comes from the REAR of the screen not from behind the audience in front of the screen. More info available at www.thekinemainthewoods.co.uk.
The whole experience of going to see a film there is a very refreshing change from the ubiquitous multi-plex replete with popcorn fights and ill-behaved teens.
Thread highjack over!
Dr D.
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Well flanner, as a humble Sellic fan let me just say this;
So maybe I don't know who Liddel & Scott are - did they form a central defensive partnership for Hibs just after the war?
And maybe I'm not too sure about Herodtus - Greek cup winners in 1972?
But this much I do know.......(grows red in face & bangs table loudly)......
Caley Thistle only beat us 3-1.
Jim
So maybe I don't know who Liddel & Scott are - did they form a central defensive partnership for Hibs just after the war?
And maybe I'm not too sure about Herodtus - Greek cup winners in 1972?
But this much I do know.......(grows red in face & bangs table loudly)......
Caley Thistle only beat us 3-1.
Jim