Nucular
Look up nucular in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Nucular is a common, proscribed pronunciation of the word "nuclear". It is a rough phonetic spelling of /ˈnjuːkjələr/. The Oxford English Dictionary's entry dates the word's first published appearance to 1943.[1] Dictionary notesThis is one of two contentious pronunciations that receive particular mention in the FAQ of the Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
The American Heritage Dictionary notes:
The Oxford English Dictionary notes:
In his 1999 book The Big Book of Beastly Mispronunciations, logophile Charles Harrington Elster wrote that the vast majority of those he spoke to while writing his book as well as 99% of the 1985 usage panel of Morris & Morris's Harper Dictionary of Contemporary Usage specifically condemned the use of the word and characterized it as a mispronunciation. Elster's own view on the matter derives from the root of the word: "nucleus". Arguing by analogy, Elster suggests that "Molecular comes from molecule, and particular comes from particle, but there is no nucule to support nucular."[6][7] Notable usersThe U.S. presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush[8] and vice president Walter Mondale used this pronunciation.[9] In his 2005 book Going Nucular, linguist Geoffrey Nunberg suggested that the presidents' reasons for their differing pronunciations may be distinct. Whereas Eisenhower's pronunciation most likely arose from lack of familiarity (he first learned the word in midlife), Bush's usage may represent a calculated effort to appeal to populist sentiment,[10] though Nunberg's theory here is rejected by linguist Steven Pinker.[9] This analysis is repeated in the second edition of Elster's Big Book of Beastly Mispronunciations.[6] Oxford professor Marcus du Sautoy used this pronunciation in a BBC documentary,[11] and Orson Welles said "nucular" while speaking at the 1982 "No Nukes" rally in Central Park.[citation needed] The nuclear physicist Edward Teller, "father" of the American hydrogen bomb, supposedly used "nucular", and it does have some currency in the American nuclear research establishment.[12] But in a 1965 interview on Project Plowshare, Teller used the standard pronunciation.[13] In popular cultureIn popular culture, this pronunciation has often been used to signify inferiority, low intellect or foolishness. In Woody Allen's 1989 film Crimes and Misdemeanors, Mia Farrow's character says she could never fall for any man who says "nucular".[14] The pronunciation is satirized in the 1996 science fiction film Mars Attacks!. It is used earnestly by Indiana Jones in the 2008 film Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull after he survives an atomic bomb test by crawling inside a lead-lined refrigerator. In Get Smart, also released in 2008, the President, a clear parody of George W. Bush, says "nucular", only for the exasperated Chief of CONTROL to loudly correct him. In Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted, Skipper corrects Gloria's standard pronunciation of the word "nuclear" to "nucular".[15] In Don Delillo's 1997 novel Underworld, Marvin mentions nuclear weapons and it is said "He pronounced it nucular".[16] Homer Simpson (a nuclear power plant employee) of the American animated TV series The Simpsons[17] and Peter Griffin of the animated comedy series Family Guy[18] both say "nucular" (in these episodes, Homer and Peter both "correct" someone else's correct pronunciation of the word). MotivationPinker has proposed[19] a phonotactic explanation for the conversion of nuclear to nucular: the unusual and disfavored sequence [kli.ər] is gradually transformed to a more acceptable configuration via metathesis.[citation needed] But Arnold Zwicky notes that [kli.ər] presents no difficulty for English speakers in words such as pricklier and deems the postulation of metathesis unnecessary. He suggests a morphological origin, combining the slang nuke with the common sequence -cular (molecular, particular, etc.).[20] Supporting Zwicky's hypothesis, Geoffrey Nunberg quotes a government weapons specialist:[which?] "Oh, I only say 'nucular' when I'm talking about nukes."[21] Nunberg argues that this pronunciation by weapons specialists and by politicians such as Bush may be a deliberate choice. He suggests that the reasons for this choice are to assert authority or to sound folksy. See alsoReferences
|