
Why do "catsup" and "ketchup" coexist? - English Language
Catsup (earlier catchup) is a failed attempt at Anglicization, still in use in U.S. Originally a fish sauce, early English recipes included among their ingredients mushrooms, walnuts, …
What is the etymology of the word ketchup?
Oct 2, 2016 · An Ngram of catsup (blue line) vs. ketchup (red line). And a quote from Jeffrey Steingarten's excellent The Man Who Ate Everything: Where did ketchup get its start? The …
What is one word for "the nervous excitement associated with new …
Oct 28, 2015 · A word which figured prominently in a catsup commercial years ago is ANTICIPATION. Whatever brand it was, the person in the commercial would hold the catsup …
etymology - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Nov 26, 2020 · A Google Ngram search of the Google Books database for the period 1800–2019 shows that chanterelle (red line) is much the preferred spelling today over chantarelle (blue …
Is there a common abbreviation for "with or without"? e.g. w/wo …
👉 Fries and rings available w±o/salt And so you order yourself up: 1 redhot basket w/rings 1 bratwurst basket w/kraut 1 naked polish w/chili 3 redhots w/o onions 1 knockwurst w/catsup Or …
etymology - Researching the real origin of SNAFU - English …
The Army lingo on the common expressions follows: Tomatoes and catsup are "red lead." salt and pepper "side arms." Salt by itself, "sea dust," spinach "seaweed," and that anybody who didn't …
Do any words have three or more correct spellings? [closed]
There are ketchup, catsup, and catchup, all in the Merriam-Webster dictionary. And in fact, looking at Ngrams, all three spellings were reasonably common between 1910 and 1960, …
Sound you make with your mouth - English Language & Usage …
Aug 1, 2013 · But Papa gobbed it with relish 'n catsup, mmm . . . is bound to be AmE (our catsup is ketchup). We all use gob creatively, not just as an exact replacement for mouth. You can't …
Why is the initial "ts" sound (e.g "tsunami") pronounced as "s"?
Dec 6, 2014 · The "ts" sound is called Voiceless alveolar affricate and it is a feature of some languages, but not English. There are some borrowed foreign words that include it in the …
etymology - Origin and scope of "cruft" - English Language
Like spilled coffee smeared with peanut butter and catsup. Generally unpleasant. (sometimes spelled cruftie) n. A small crufty object (see frob); often one that doesn't fit well into the …