A Conversation for Ask h2g2

Programme or program?

Post 41

Researcher 538645

nnnnrrrrrr It just doesn't sound right


Programme or program?

Post 42

dasilva

It's perfectly valid and as it's less archaic technically more acceptable...but it's just not as nice a word! smiley - biggrin


Programme or program?

Post 43

RFJS__ - trying to write an unreadable book, finding proofreading tricky

Technically more acceptable to whom?


Programme or program?

Post 44

Old Hairy

I suspect those paid fortnightly buy weekly.


Programme or program?

Post 45

dasilva

To the grammarati smiley - silly


Programme or program?

Post 46

Researcher 538645

may be a silly question but... is fortnight a contraction of 'fourteen nights'?


Programme or program?

Post 47

Cheerful Dragon

At college we were told "The only stupid question is the one you don't ask." If only that were true!

Yes, fortnight is a contraction of 'fourteen nights', just as sennight is a contraction of 'seven nights'. Language is often amazingly simple - mainly because most of the people who use it are.


Programme or program?

Post 48

Researcher 538645

Being in the location NZ is, there are many converging variations of language. I've the rather difficult position where I've used slang with someone for whom it meant the complete opposite where they were from.


Programme or program?

Post 49

Fathom


What about disk? He said, idly reopening a week-old conversation.

I've always used disk for floppy or hard ... but disc for any other kind. Did someone misspell it in the first place or is disk just the standard US spelling so it got to the UK in the same that program did?

F


Programme or program?

Post 50

Old Hairy

Obviously, as the program was on a disk.


Programme or program?

Post 51

Fathom


smiley - laugh

F


Programme or program?

Post 52

Fathom


That's an interesting point.

If you were to record, say, Coronation St on one of the new DVD player/recorders and also place a copy of 'Minesweeper' on a floppy you'd have a programme on a disc and a program on a disk.

No wonder context sensitive voice recognition still has problems!

F


Programme or program?

Post 53

RFJS__ - trying to write an unreadable book, finding proofreading tricky

I suspect that it may have something to do with Latin/Greek distinctions. Ancient Greek had kappa; classical Latin apparently used 'c' for the same sound (derived from gamma by a roundabout route through Etruscan, I read somewhere). Hence a latinised form of a Greek word would use 'c' for kappa, whereas a modern English romanisation from the original Greek would use 'k'. (As in sceptic/skeptic -- although both forms use the terminal 'c'.) However, I lack the etymological knowledge to be certain about this. Anyone?


Programme or program?

Post 54

dasilva

Disk, as in floppy, is an abbreviation of "diskette," emphasising the miniature nature of the things (bearing in mind I entered the world of computing in the era of compact cassette tape and floppies were 5.25 or 8 inches and really were floppy! smiley - laugh)


Programme or program?

Post 55

Researcher 538645

I used to play idly with the notching tool for the 5 1/4's while waiting for a 20KB prog to load.

Them were the days


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