- century.
Since the
sound "h" is
dropped in many dialects, the
phrase was
hypercorrected or
changed due to folk
etymology to "humble pie".
While "umble" is now...
-
placed after tsade (צ׳ ; ץ׳),
giving it the
sound [t͡ʃ] (or, in a
hypercorrected pronunciation, a
pharyngealized [ʃˤ]), e.g. צִ׳יפְּס chips. Ṣade appears...
- Cœline and Matthœo were a used[clarification needed] (see citations),
hypercorrected form of the names. The
grapheme ß was
originally made out of the characters...
- (both
gadol and qatan),
which would normally be
pronounced [ɔ], is
hypercorrected to the
pronunciation of holam, [ɔj],
rendering גדול ('large') as goydl...
-
Farrow is a
hypercorrected form of
Ferror (Farrar), an
occupational surname for a
blacksmith or an ironworker, an old name of
early Medieval English and...
-
which first aired in the UK in 2015. The
character is
known for his
hypercorrected ****ney
speech and
frequent use of the
phrase "Yes, M'Lady" to acknowledge...
-
larger one", in
comparison to Menorca, "the
smaller one". This was then
hypercorrected to
Mallorca by
central Catalan scribes,
which later came to be accepted...
- the
authentic (and correct) name
Maiorca was
another case of this and
hypercorrected it to Mallorca. This new form
ended up
becoming the
usual pronunciation...
-
hypercorrected:
asministracione púsblica [asministɾaˈsjone ˈpusβlika]
Example 2: standard:
jaguar [jaguar] vernacular:
jagual /
jaguai hypercorrected:...
-
Borsboom is a
Dutch surname. It is a
hypercorrected form of the
toponymic surname Bosboom,
meaning "forest tree".
Notable people with
these surnames include:...