Octopodes.
Memes
Rules:
- Be civil and nice.
- Try not to excessively repost, as a rule of thumb, wait at least 2 months to do it if you have to.
Beat me to it
Please don't beat your meat to octopodes
Hey, we're not hurting anyone!!!
Octopodeez nuts
As long as they’re penetrating a lady I don’t care what they are called.
Ah, i see you are a man of culture as well.
Octopussies
Hexadecipus
When a Roman family has their 16th child.
Octos
.. podes
Marco!
Veemo!
Woomy!
If you say ok-top-o-dees, you'd better be prepared to deliver this spiel at a moment's notice
HA! That video was really good. Extremely quick and to the point, great linguistics content, and funny to boot!
Octopus, octopuses, and octopodes are correct. Octopi incorrect.
Octopi is also correct. If anything, more correct than octopodes by virtue of popularity. Mismatching the language to the suffix does not a fake word make!
In greek it would be incorrect, in english it's not worse than the others.
Octopice.
Roger Moore would disagree.
Octopussies
I knew there was going to be someone as ~~childish~~ funny as me in here!
It is octopodes. It's Greek and it follows the Greek pluralisation convention.
Octopussy. Thank you very much.
Words brought into English can use English pluralisations, so you're not wrong if you say octopuses. I think Grammar Girl had a take on this maybe 7 or even 8 years ago by now. These days, I can't see myself getting worked up about it for the sheer fun of being pedantic like I used to.
It's not octopuses that octopodes corrects, it's octopi. Octopi is a Latin pluralization, and since the word is Greek and us to i isn't specifically American, I agree with you that octopuses is fine but not that octopi is fine.
I am the guy in the middle, except I'm telling people it's octopuses.
You do have the benefit of being right though.
The word octopus is a classical Greek word that comes to English via Latin. The Greek plural is octopodes, the Latin plural is octopi. But we don't speak Latin or classical Greek. We speak English. Because octopus is the English word for octopus it follows the English rules for pluralization, which is to add "s" or "es" to the end of the word. Cases can be made why octopi and octopodes could be technically correct, but for English speakers octopuses is the most correct.
Yeah, I did something for work where I had to study up about it and instead of being angry it's just kind of a fun fact. I don't actually mind what people say, I think everyone understands what you mean regardless.
When I document code I have this problem with indices vs indexes.
Octopi is a hypercorrectism which doesn't make it wrong
Neither are incorrect, that’s the point
I just wanted to namedrop the technical term. Both are fine
My favorite hypercorrection (a hyperforeignism, if you like) is "habañero," and really stressing the "ñ" when you say it.
Except it's just "habanero," plain ol' "n." The confusion is presumably due to "jalapeño" having an accent.
A hypercorrection based on a misunderstanding of the Latin declension for the word, at that.
octopus - octopi
amogus - amogi
chungus - chungi
Why is octopi correct? Based on what?
Because people use it, and if you say it everybody will understand without any ambiguity.
Then the meme is formatted incorrectly. Or "correctly", if we define correct as "incorrect, but, you get it, so..."
The Latin origin. Words ending on -us turn almost always into -i in plural in Latin. And that's where it comes from (octo eight, pus/pes foot).
It's Greek, not Latin. It should be octopodes.
This is the one.
Octopuses is correct if you're referring to many different species of octopus. Octopi would be correct if you're referring to a cluster of one species of octopus.
Imagine speaking correct English
Btw is there a difference between people.and persons? I hear both being used but i grew up with people.
Great question. When I hear people I think that’s used to draw attention to common relevant traits “people of England” for example. Persons is more a group of less related individuals or at least with less relevant similarities “persons of interest” for example
people = a group
persons = a group of individuals
Wait is seriously everyone in here wrong?
Guys it's:
OCTOPEOPLE
Inclusion, let's keep it up.