Society for Pure English, Tract 02 - On English Homophones by Robert Seymour Bridges;Society for Pure English
page 9 of 94 (09%)
page 9 of 94 (09%)
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The homophones in the other sections, iv, v, vi, vii, viii and ix, are _generally_ of such a kind that they would not of themselves constitute a very peculiar case against the English language; but their addition to the main list does very much strengthen the case. One intention in isolating them from the main list was to prevent their contaminating it with their weaker quality; but their separate classification crosses and sometimes overrides that more general distinction. Section iv has some literary interest; vi is inconsistent; the other sections are more or less scientific. These six sections contain some 330 entries involving about 700 words, so that the total of words involved is about 1,775. The order in this section is that of the phonetic alphabet. I. THE MAIN LIST OF HOMOPHONES. arc, ark. arm (_limb_), arm (_weapon_). alms, arms. aunt, ant, arn't. arch (_s._), arch (_adj._). eye, ay, I. idol, idle, idyll. aisle, isle, I'll. eyelet, islet. our, hour. bark (_dog_), bark (_tree_), bark (_boat_). balm, barm. |
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