What if people pronounced the word TWO without the silent W?
What if people pronounced the word TWO without the silent W?
And why is the W silent anyways?
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Curiously in words related to 'two' the W is often pronounced!
Twin, Twixt, Between, Twelve etc
41 0 ReplyTwain.
"He split Robin's arrow in twain!"
1 0 ReplyOh. My. God. I am so disappointed in myself that I never realized these words were all related before. Thank you for this gift.
31 0 ReplyA few less-obvious associations, just for fun:
- Just like "the house" /s/ is "to house" /z/, "the glass" /s/ is "to glaze" /z/
- Tiw's Day, Wotan's Day, Thor's Day, Frigg's Day. Note: Tiw, Wotan and Frigg are the native names for Norse Tyr, Odin and Freyja.
- "Flee", "fly", "flow" are all related.
- The "mus" in "muscle" is a borrowed cognate to native "mouse".
1 0 Reply
By the argument, is the w in "two" actually silent? What would it sounds like when pronounced? I think it would sound like "two" already does.
12 1 ReplyIt would sound like “twu” as in “twu wuv”
22 0 ReplyMawwiage!
6 0 ReplyLol.
OK, Impressive Clergyman!
6 0 Reply
It sounds exactly like "to" which means the w is silent.
It is not pronounced at all like any of the other example words given.
14 1 ReplyI don't necessarily think so. If the W was pronounced, I think it would sound something more like 'tawoo' or 'teewoo'
8 0 Replytwoah
10 0 Replyhawk twoah
6 1 ReplySpell out that thang!
2 0 Reply
I wonder if perhaps an older dialect used to pronounce the W. Lots of words have changed spelling or pronunciation over the years, so I'm curious if that might be the case with "two", too.
6 0 ReplyI wonder if perhaps an older dialect used to pronounce the W.
That's correct, and it isn't even that old - based on the [o:]→[u:] change it should be from 1500 or so. And the modern Scots cognate ⟨twa⟩ /twɑ:/~/twɔ:/ still has it.
1 0 Reply
Side question?
Does twelve basically mean two eleven?
4 0 ReplyTwelve's root is in meaning "two left". And similarly eleven's origin is meaning "one left". In both cases left over from ten, the base unit of counting.
10 0 ReplyInteresting. This sorta makes sense actually.
Curious though, do you have a reference link?
3 0 Reply
The last time I was with a woman it was actually twoo, it was quite magical, I tell ya.
1 0 Reply