I got yer plural right here

Dec 16, 2009 17:27

I read a couple of days ago that the only acceptable English plural of "octopus" is "octopuses," and that "octopi" is incorrect and "octopodes" misguided. I believe I have found a solution: more than one octopus is an "octoposse."

neologism

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Comments 8

uitlander December 16 2009, 22:42:24 UTC
Octopoda actually.

The old senior tutor's life's work was a study of their sex lives. Her paper in Nature on the first observation of gay octopodia going at it with tentacles everywhere did cause some degree of sputtering when I first encountered it. Not at all what you expect from a very formal lady with a steel blue rinse.

Edited due to typo.

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mrslant December 17 2009, 09:16:39 UTC
Outside the technical scientific context, I'd adopt the usual procedure for third-declension Greek and Latin nouns of taking the stem and adding the English plural in -s, hence octopods, cf. arthropods, gastropods, cephalopods, etc.

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heronymus_waat December 17 2009, 07:23:44 UTC
I'm in the "octopoda" or "octopodes" family myself, but I'm totally going to switch to octoposse now.

Just because I want to see the look on faces when I say it out loud and everyone mis-hears me.

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esmeraldus_neo December 17 2009, 07:30:43 UTC
And octoposse comitatus is the power of a sheriff to conscript any able-bodied plural of octopus for law-enforcement purposes.

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cat63 December 17 2009, 09:27:16 UTC
[snerk!]

And now I have a mental image of an octopus in a stetson rounding up cattle using one of his tentacles as a lassoo....

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randombler December 17 2009, 10:50:49 UTC
In octopus-related news, octoposses have been found to be tool users:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8408233.stm

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naxela December 17 2009, 19:34:01 UTC
English is a living language! I'm using "octoposse"

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