This
"'M I late?"
indicates only a contraction, or also a different pronunciation, as in
"M," as opposed of "am?"
Was it supposedly lower-class?
-----
[Hooper is a lower-class officer, it seems; Ryder has trouble finding
him;]
"I want to speak to Mr Hooper, sergeant-major ... well, where the
devil have you been? I told you to inspect the lines."
"'M I late? Sorry. Had a rush getting my gear together."
Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited, p. 673
----
--
Thanks.
Marius Hancu
> Hello:
>
> This
> "'M I late?"
> indicates only a contraction, or also a different pronunciation, as in
> "M," as opposed of "am?"
Both. I mean also.
>
> Was it supposedly lower-class?
>
Not really, no. Just a contraction in hurried speech.
Hooper seems to stand for everything that Ryder (aka
Waugh) despises in the "modern world", so I suspect
this *is* a dig at his "common" accent. He also uses
the expression "righty-o", to Ryder's annoyance.
> Hello:
>
> This
> "'M I late?"
> indicates only a contraction, or also a different pronunciation, as in
> "M," as opposed of "am?"
A contraction always means "a different pronunciation," doesn't it?
I looked up the Google Books text and it shows the marks more clearly
than does the Usenet post -- a single quote mark for dialog, and an
apostrophe that changes "am" to "m".
The only way I can imagine pronoucing "'M I" is like "my".
> "I want to speak to Mr Hooper, sergeant-major ... well, where the
> devil have you been? I told you to inspect the lines."
>
> "'M I late? Sorry. Had a rush getting my gear together."
>
> Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited, p. 673
--
Best -- Donna Richoux
> Marius Hancu <marius...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hello:
>>
>> This "'M I late?" indicates only a contraction, or also a
>> different pronunciation, as in "M," as opposed of "am?"
>
> A contraction always means "a different pronunciation," doesn't it?
>
> I looked up the Google Books text and it shows the marks more clearly
> than does the Usenet post -- a single quote mark for dialog, and an
> apostrophe that changes "am" to "m".
>
> The only way I can imagine pronoucing "'M I" is like "my".
Think of it as a syllabic /m-/, as in the affirmative /m- hm-/. So
"'m I" would be two syllables, /m- aI/.
--
Evan Kirshenbaum +------------------------------------
HP Laboratories |It's not coherent, it's merely
1501 Page Mill Road, 1U, MS 1141 |focused.
Palo Alto, CA 94304 | Keith Moore
kirsh...@hpl.hp.com
(650)857-7572
Although he says "The troops did not like Hooper ... but I had a feeling
which almost amounted to affection for him."
He notes Hooper's "flat, Midland accent".
--
John Dean
Oxford