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Date: 2024-09-27 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00025017
LANGUAGE
A FASCINATING REFLECTION OF HISTORY

The story of 'Indict' !!!!!!!


Original article: https://www.merriam-webster.com/video/why-is-there-a-c-in-indict
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY
I found the following very amusing ... and at the same time deeply thought provoking. Mt takeaway is simply that there is usually an explanation for everything going back in time.

But I wonder what the typical modern 20 year old with take from this. I worry that it is likely to be virtually nothing!
Peter Burgess
Editor Peter Sokolowski explains how the spelling of indict was changed to reflect its Latin roots. For more, read 'Why Do We Skip the C in Indict'
The word indict is spelled I-N-D-I-C-T, but why is the C silent? Other legal terms in English, that come from the same Latin root, dicere, which means to say, have C's that we actually hear. Words like edict, interdict, and verdict. Indict means to formally decide that someone should be put on trial for a crime. It comes from the Latin word that means to proclaim. We pronounce it indict because its original spelling in English was E-N-D-I-T-E, a spelling that was used for 300 years before scholars decided to make it look more like its Latin root word, indictare. Our pronunciation, however, still reflects the original English spelling. This after-the-fact correction of spellings, based on Latin, is also why there's a B in the words debt, doubt, plumber, and subtle, and a silent S in island.


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