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Until fairly recently the usual convention for abbreviating microphone was "mike". However, latterly, I've regularly seen it written "mic" instead. Does it appear thus on the other side of the Pond? Has anyone any idea when (and why) it changed? Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | ||
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arnie: After 78 rpm in Leftpond I have never seen it spelled mic However I will query my No. 1 Son Lee Scott who is only 33 rpm and may be up on the latest | |||
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I've seen both. I tend to use mic. A mic is also slang for microgram, e.g., 100 mics of acid. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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zm, where is R'lyeh | |||
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where is R'lyeh R'lyeh is currently at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. I live in the San Francisco Bay Area these days. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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If I see "mic" I tend to read it as if it's pronounced "Mick". Perhaps it originated in Ireland? "Bicycle" and "tricycle" are shortened to "bike" and "trike"; I've never seen "bic" or "tric" (apart from the name of a make of ball-point pen for the former). Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Thought it looked familiar. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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Which is why I refuse to use the oxymoronic term "quad bike" when referring to a quadricycle. Richard English | |||
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Whoops! Old age is coming faster than I thought! And I started that thread. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Why create another word when two perfectly good words exist? Quadricycle and its abbreviation, quad., are not only correct but follow in the series of names for other wheeled vehicles: unicycle, bicycle and tricycle. The name was common in the 19th and early 20th century and was often used to describe small, four-wheeled motorised vehicles (along with many other names) before term "car" and "automobile" became universal. Richard English | |||
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bike, trike, quike? "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
I know you'll never believe it, but I was being silly. | ||
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Because bicycle and tricycle are from Greeks roots I suggest tetracycle, which sounds like an antibiotic, but then no word is perfect. If you look at the structure of tetracycline you can even see the four wheels—well, hexagons. And what about those crazy dicycles? —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
OK, so how do you classify the biblical wheel of Ezekiel? (Wheel within a wheel) | ||
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Oh I believe it Richard English | |||
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how do you classify the biblical wheel of Ezekiel? Rotae Hiezecihelenses. But seriously: et aspectus rotarum et opus earum quasi visio maris et una similitudo ipsarum quattuor et aspectus earum et opera quasi sit rota in medio rotae Ezek. I.16. In Latin, rota in medio rotae, and in Greek ειη τροχος εν τροχω (eiē trokhos en trokhō), and in Hebrew on request. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
This from the London Daily Mail regarding a certain "Mick" Mick Forsythe, 55, is an Irishman who lives in Wales. When he got into an argument with a woman after a minor traffic accident, he screamed that she was an "English bitch." That led to criminal charges -- not because of the accident or the "B" word, but rather because of his "racially aggravated disorderly behavior" for cursing the Welsh woman as "English". Forsythe was found guilty and fined 200 pounds (US$404); a 10-week prison sentence was suspended for 12 months. The case is "political correctness gone mad," Forsythe says. "They're officially calling me a racist." | ||
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I've only seen it written as mic, and I've always thought that funny as I'd think it would be pronounced with a short i. Slang? I am not sure I've heard slang for microgram, but when abbreviated, I've only seen it as mcg. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
I was going to ask when they went from mike to mic but I noticed I'm several years behind. Story of my life. | ||
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I've only noticed in the last year or two and assumed it was recent. But the OED Online records it from 1961.
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It's funny because I wrote above in 2007 that I'd write mic, but now I am not sure. I don't know that I've written it before, but I sure pronounce it as mike. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
Mic is "mike" But not these; tic Bic Vic sic And then there's "chic." | ||
<Proofreader> |
I couldn't sleep last night (terrible cold) and I got to thinking about "mic" and why that one word is pronounced differently. For example, there are lots of words ending in mic -- [i]endemic, atomic, rhythmic, comej to mind -- but none are pronouncerd "mike". Then it occured to me that the reason for this misuse is probably due to the electronic industry. Manufacturers labelled the ports on musical and stereo equipment and "mic" was often put on the one for the microphone. | ||
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It reminds me of another abbreviated word we use...fave for favorite. I had always spelled it fav, but I was criticized for spelling it that way on OEDILF and was made to change the limerick (or not get it approved). I could see their point, I suppose, because of the long a, but I had always spelled it that way. | |||
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What do they know? As of this moment, GoogleNews (which lists the past 30-or-so days) has your version outnumbering fave by 1399 to 836. | |||
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