Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Habits and Hyperbole

When I first saw the word 'Hyperbole', I read it as any sixth grader would: hy-per-bowl.

"Is that like the super bowl but better?"

"Is that like the super fast cousin of the common mole? Like he digs really super fast?"

"Wait... what does it even mean?"

It wasn't until a few years later that I came across it again and learned what it actually meant, and yes, how to say it properly. Hy-per-buh-lee for those that doubt my pronunciation skills :P

However, even though I know how to properly pronounce the word, and really like what it means (I myself hyperbolize all the time), whenever I see it written I always say or think it the same way I did when I was 11. It's like those intervening years from when I first saw it to when I first truly understood it have cemented the incorrect pronunciation in my subconscious.

I have to work actively against it.

'Hy-per-bow-'
'NO! It's hy-per-buh-lee.'
'Oh, right.'

Now, this is only when I read it. My brain has managed to work around that bit of faulty wiring when I need to use the word in conversation, thank goodness. I sometimes wonder if I'll ever break this trivial habit of mine. I'm sure most people have something similar. A habit or something like it from childhood that still manifests itself from time to time.

5 comments:

Janice Head said...

I'm glad I'm not the only one! I have a dream that someday soon in America we will overhaul the spelling system and go to a strictly phonetic spelling of everything. I think the "texting" generation will be the one to do it.

Heidi D said...

Your fancy words make my brain box hurt.

KaTrina said...

blahblahblah be happy you have a comment.


I CAN BREATHE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

SuzanSayz said...

Hyperbole is one of my favorite words as well. I almost used it in a post the other day, but then I realized that a lot of people wouldn't know it. That's so darn frustrating. I love words, I love to continue to expand my vocabulary, and then I have to face the real world where most people have no idea what I just said. It's even worse when they accuse me of showing off. Like it's considered a bad thing to really use the english language? Sadly I don't think relief is on it's way. What passes for a normal vocabulary these days would have barely been considered literate 50 years ago.

Sigh.

Mike 'n' Cindy Brinkerhoff said...

Kelly - I have the same exact scenario, only my word was "facade".

Eve as I typed it, in my mind, I heard "fay-kade"