February 20, 2007, 11:28
<wordnerd>"Dis" discussion
Plenty of words begin with the prefix
dis-, meaning 'not' or 'opposite' or 'negation' or something of that sort. Many examples will pop into your mind immediately.
But remember today's post about "
erectile dysfunction, or ED"? Off the top of my head I can't think of any other example of the
dys-form. Doubtless there are some, but surely nowhere near as many as
dis-.
My first thought was that
dysfunction was just a relatively rare form of
disfunction. But it turns out that it's not rarer; it gets far more google hits.¹
So? Why the
y here, and near-uniquely here?
¹Even omiting d(i)(y)sfunctions of the 'erectile' or 'sexual' sort:
1,780,000 ghits for
dysfunction -erectile -sexual308,000 ghits for
disfunction -erectile -sexualFebruary 20, 2007, 13:38
zmježd Dys- is more common in medical words, like
dysentery,
dyscrasia, etc. I'd say it's similar to the Alzheimer's Disease discussion we have a while back.