with the âshort eâ â apart from in New Zealand.
We have several ways of getting it to signify the long âeâ â doubling it in âfeetâ, adding âaâ in âseatâ, putting another kind of âeâ one consonant later as in âdiscreteâ and âPeteâ. The one-consonant trick used to be called âthe silent eâ or even âthe magic eâ. This was to âexplainâ to children that âhatâ turned to âhateâ by magic. Present-day wisdom tries to show that the âaâ in âhateâ is made by both the âaâ and the âeâ one consonant later.
The history of this represents one of many efforts to make sense of English spelling. Some Old English words had a final âeâ that was sounded as a âschwaâ sound, as with ânameâ, pronounced as Germans do today ânah-merâ (but without the ârâ being voiced). However, when âwifâ acquired its âlong iâ as we say it today, the spelling reformers of the seventeenth century decided that long vowel sounds, like âayâ, âeeâ, âiâ (as in âIâ on its own), âoâ (sounding like âoweâ) and âuâ (sounding like âyouâ), should have an âeâ on the end of the word to tell readers what to do, thus: âsameâ, âPeteâ, âwifeâ, âgnomeâ and âplumeâ. All well and good, but there are some words ending with âeâ where the âeâ doesnât do this kind of work for us: like âsomeâ, âhaveâ, âshoveâ or âgoneâ. Loan words like âcafeâ (which has mostly dropped its French accent over the âeâ) are a rule unto themselves.
Spelling reformers would have us adopting double-vowel letters: one long, one short, then all these complicationscould be stamped out. It would up the alphabet to thirty-one letters by adding a long âaâ, âeâ, âiâ, âoâ and âuâ but would simplify spelling by miles. If for a moment we imagined that the long vowels were âaAâ, âeEâ, âiIâ, âoOâ and âuUâ, we could write, âMiI wiIf and iI lov eEting a niIc hot meEl at middaA.â NeEt, eh?
The little âeh?â sound is extremely useful, as it gives us a way of asking questions in different ways depending on the tone of the âeh?â It can be inviting, contemptuous, rhetorical, all-knowing, wink-winking and so on.
âEeeeâ can mean excitement or fear or a mock-version of both. âEekâ is even more jokey. A Jamaican singer in the 1970s called himself âEek-a-mouseâ. One girlsâ skipping song begins: âEevy-ivy-overâ.
For âerâ see â R â.
e IS FOR e. e. cummings
I N ABOUT 1960, my father showed me some poems by e. e. cummings. (Note: not E. E. Cummings.) For a while, I felt dislocated, at a loose end. The point about our conventions of print are that they tell you where you are, without telling you. That simple little duo, the full stop and capital letter, not only tells us of initials, abbreviations and the beginning and end of sentences. Since their invention, they have been part of how we have invented continuous prose. In the history of writing as a whole, they are relative newcomers and their arrival was slow and inconsistent.
Using capital letters to begin things started out as early as the fourth century where they were used at the start of a page. Take a look at the illuminated manuscripts in the great national libraries and youâll see that the scribes must have taken many hours creating these staggeringly ornate openers. By the fourteenth century, many scribes were using capitals to begin sentences, so by the time printing began with Johannes Gutenberg in Germany in the
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