• @[email protected]
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    3015 days ago

    Rhetorical, just FYI. I’m an American in Germany and I’ve literally never met a native German speaker who wasn’t a linguistics professor who didn’t say “rethoric” though, so it’s not a big mistake at all. I do wonder if there was a misprint in a popular textbook or something though, because it’s weirdly consistent, even more so than I would expect from a word with a silent (in German) h somewhere.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 days ago

      It’s a lot more unusual to have an h after an r than an h after a t, even in German. So if you vaguely remember there’s supposed to be an h somewhere, it intuitively makes more sense after the t.

      In German, “th” is uncommon (non-existent?) in words that aren’t overtly borrowed from Latin/Greek, so you get overcompensation like “Ethymologie”. “Rhythmus” trips me up every time.

      • @[email protected]
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        415 days ago

        Yeah, that’s definitely a reason for it, but it’s always this word. I don’t recall a German saying ethymology or rhytmic, but this is probably the most common mistake I’ve noticed among C1-C2 English speakers here. The other one might be German mtg players saying “viscera” with the accent on the e, but that’s probably because of a popular YouTuber who influenced local game store culture.

        • ᴍᴜᴛɪʟᴀᴛɪᴏɴᴡᴀᴠᴇ
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          315 days ago

          This is the first time in my life I’ve seen it spelled “rethorical” and I’ve never heard it said that way. I’m in a particularly stupid part of the US but I’ve travelled most of the country.

          • @[email protected]
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            315 days ago

            Do you hang out with a lot of native German speakers? They’re the ones who do it ime, not native English speakers, and probably not nonnative speakers who live in anglophone countries for a while or who went to anglophone schools.