The spelling of Latin plurals in words like fungi and algae produces pronunciation variants and spirited arguments over correctness. Because the experts in specialty areas could be considered the arbiters of terminology standards, American and British biologists in several fields were surveyed to determine whether historical standard pronunciations of certain words have been maintained or lost. Results indicate that in some cases traditional pronunciations are still the standard in these discourse communities, while in others North America and the United Kingdom have diverged. In addition, newer spelling pronunciations have come into play on both sides of the Atlantic, even among these experts, with older forms threatened with extinction. Binomial nomenclature is also subject to variation as a long-standing debate over the use of anglicized or classical Latin and Greek challenges the need for any standard pronunciation at all.
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Research Article|
February 01 2025
Algae, Fungi, Binomial Nomenclature, and the Search for “Correct” Pronunciations
Dale F. Coye
Thomas Edison State University
DALE F. COYE teaches at New Jersey’s online Thomas Edison State University. He has contributed several articles to American Speech over the years after completing his dissertation at Princeton University on accents for actors. He is a dialect coach, has written a number of plays for Waldorf schools, and is the author of Pronouncing Shakespeare’s Words: A Guide from A to Zounds (Greenwood Press, 1998). He is currently working on translations of Austria’s best-known playwright, Johann Nestroy. Email: [email protected].
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American Speech (2025) 100 (1): 74–92.
Citation
Dale F. Coye; Algae, Fungi, Binomial Nomenclature, and the Search for “Correct” Pronunciations. American Speech 1 February 2025; 100 (1): 74–92. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00031283-11466566
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