Apparently this reminder is needed.

It is a meme.

      • @[email protected]
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        -16 months ago

        it’s pronounced “hiccup” but some people don’t respect the spelling and write it phonetically.

        • @[email protected]
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          106 months ago

          I’ve never seen it written that way, love to read, was an EMT, went to college, etc… Just saying I missed that somewhere and often saw hiccup, even in EMT educational textbooks.

    • Troy
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      56 months ago

      I’d argue that even cough and rough are different. There’s probably more.

      • @surewhynotlem
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        46 months ago

        Literally everyone says that word. They just pronounce it hiccup.

        • @Dexx1s
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          106 months ago

          No, we all say hiccup. FFS, googling “hiccough” essentially autocorrects to hiccup. If everyone spells it hiccup and also pronounces it hiccup, literally no one is using “hiccough”.

          • @surewhynotlem
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            36 months ago

            Sure sure. And you can spell through as thru as well. That doesn’t change the original spelling, or the fact that they’re pronounced the same.

            • @Dexx1s
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              06 months ago

              And you can spell through as thru as well.

              No you can’t. Not in the same way. “Thru” is an informal word, similar to writing “gud 2 c u”.

              How about you at least try something that’s not blatantly inequivalent. If I Google “thru”, what can I expect to find? If I run both through a dictionary, what can I expect to find? If I poll the general public on each, which one would be accepted as a proper spelling? What would I have to do to both “thru” and “hiccup” be treated as equals here?

              That doesn’t change the original spelling, or the fact that they’re pronounced the same

              I said nothing about an original spelling. But if you’re calling it the original spelling, you’re kinda just conceding that “Hiccough” is the original and “hiccup” is the current.

              • @surewhynotlem
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                36 months ago

                Thru is informal, today. Hiccup was informal years ago. Language progresses.

        • @Donebrach
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          06 months ago

          no one uses hiccough. it’s outdated and dead. Just as in the future no one will use “surewhynotlem” and will instead use the proper and more agreed upon spelling “donebrach”