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#1 2008-12-10 13:40:32

chichilatte
Member
Registered: 2008-12-07
Posts: 4

"the gether" for "together"

“the gether” for “together”

You’ll find this said a lot in Scotland, and maybe other places too (Newcastle?)

Not a fantastic eggcorn, since gether doesn’t mean anything nice :(
Maybe one day people will eventually be saying “Let’s all get the gopher and have a knees-up”.

Last edited by chichilatte (2008-12-10 13:50:24)

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#2 2008-12-13 04:07:15

Peter Forster
Eggcornista
From: UK
Registered: 2006-09-06
Posts: 1228

Re: "the gether" for "together"

chichilatte, to my ear “the gether” sounds more like Scots/Geordie for “they gather”. “They gather together” can sound like “th’gether t’gether” for example, and sometimes there isn’t much to distinguish between between a casually delivered ‘t’ and a ‘th’ sound. “Tomorrow” is often pronounced “the morrer” but that isn’t really any help – can I ask whether you’re a visitor to the North, or a native?

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#3 2009-09-17 11:35:21

chichilatte
Member
Registered: 2008-12-07
Posts: 4

Re: "the gether" for "together"

I’m native scotch, so it’s all gospel. y, “the morra” is really common too. In fact any word prefixed with “to” seems to become a demi-corn, e.g. “how are you the day?”

Last edited by chichilatte (2009-09-17 11:37:01)

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