Ursprache – I predict that the ratings for the Scripps National Spelling Bee tonight will be huge. Meanwhile, more proof that people will bet on anything: “Online gamblers bet on spelling bee.”
Follow-up – Well, I was so very wrong about the spelling bee ratings. Maybe I should have noted that I was watching “The Office” all night.
4 comments:
Since when are German words part of an English spelling bee?
I feel your angst JD. When I went to kindergarten, I disliked the schaudenfreude other students took from my lateness due to my daushchaund throwing up his hasenfeffer after thinking he saw a poltergeist.
I hate to break up this little coffee klatsch, but oy, if I only had a nickel for every time this flak came up about ersatz words from the hinterland invading our glitzy spelling fest! Seeing some wunderkind waltz off with the U.S. title by spelling a word that makes the rest of us feel like Neanderthals raises my temperature to 103 degrees Fahrenheit. I need an aspirin.
Cute, Jody. Perhaps I should have said obscure German Words. The words you cited appear in my English dictionary, but "ursprache" doesn't, nor did I ever encounter it in 4 years of high school and college German.
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