[Info-vax] Long uptime cut short by Hurricane Sandy
VAXman- at SendSpamHere.ORG
VAXman- at SendSpamHere.ORG
Sat Feb 16 20:28:28 EST 2013
In article <kfp86d$dcm$1 at dont-email.me>, David Froble <davef at tsoft-inc.com> writes:
>Bill Gunshannon wrote:
>> In article <kfohgf$e23$1 at dont-email.me>,
>> David Froble <davef at tsoft-inc.com> writes:
>>> Bill Gunshannon wrote:
>>>> In article <00ACEFA0.609F6A62 at sendspamhere.org>,
>>>> VAXman- @SendSpamHere.ORG writes:
>>>>> In article <ao8874Fd1uoU1 at mid.individual.net>, billg999 at cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) writes:
>>>>>> In article <00ACEF2F.64E50CF6 at sendspamhere.org>,
>>>>>> VAXman- @SendSpamHere.ORG writes:
>>>>>>> In article <1Pz8et8m7O9A at eisner.encompasserve.org>, koehler at eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) writes:
>>>>>>>> In article
>>>>>>>> <3edb6d1f-62fb-4263-8005-fbde774ca26b at fn10g2000vbb.googlegroups.com>,
>>>>>>>> Rich Jordan <jordan at ccs4vms.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Our university english lit prof told the likely apocryphal tale of her
>>>>>>>>> English professor telling his students that after long and careful
>>>>>>>>> study, he had determined that the only word in the English language
>>>>>>>>> where s followed by a vowel was pronounced as 'sh' was sumac.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> One of his students asked, 'Professor, are you sure?'
>>>>>>>> This is more interesting than it may seem. I had to check that
>>>>>>>> Merriam Webster claims sumac starts with the "sh" sound. After
>>>>>>>> living in Iowa, Louisiana, Virginia, Illinois, Michigan, NJ,
>>>>>>>> and Maryland, I've never once heard it pronounced that way.
>>>>>>> You should have lived in Pennsylvania! ;)
>>>>>> I live in PA and I have lived in over a dozen differnt states and
>>>>>> a bunch of counturies and I have never heard it pronounced with the
>>>>>> "sh" sound either.
>>>>> In heavy PA Dutch areas?
>>>> Can't imagine why. It isn't pronounced with the "sh" sound in German
>>>> either. Only difference between German and English is the pronounciation
>>>> of the "a".
>>>>
>>>> And for those who think "He said Dutch, not German" :-) the word in
>>>> Dutch is "sumak". Still no "sh".
>>>>
>>>> bill
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Ah, but you omitted the interesting reason why they are called
>>> "Pennsylvania Dutch".
>>
>> Cause Pennsylvanians were stupid?
>>
>> bill
>>
>
>I believe the german word for german is something like deutch. Probably
>misspelled. So when they were asked where they were from, they replied
>deutch, and so the Pennsylvanians called them dutch.
Deutsch.
>As for the mental capability of the average Pennsylvanian, I'm not going
>there ....
Pennsylvania German/Pennsylvania D(e)ut(s)ch is a german dialect. The folks
at home always referred to it a Dutch. Time to go now throw the horse over
the fence some hay. ;)
>Probably more than you wanted to know ...
Das wundert mich.
--
VAXman- A Bored Certified VMS Kernel Mode Hacker VAXman(at)TMESIS(dot)ORG
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