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Chris -- 2018-04-11

#1 2015-10-29 07:47:38

rostox
Member
Registered: 2015-10-29
Posts: 1

long-diseased for long-deceased

I see “diseased” for “deceased” has come up before but I quite liked it in this combination:

“Stairs snake up to bricked off and boarded up rooms, through which only the spirits of long-diseased residents can pass.” Have also found other occurrences such as “long-diseased ancestor”

It is also an example of an eggcorn that can occur in contexts where it is quite correct, as in “long-diseased tissue” in medical writing.

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#2 2015-10-29 17:54:17

DavidTuggy
Eggcornista
From: Mexico
Registered: 2007-10-11
Posts: 2752
Website

Re: long-diseased for long-deceased

You’re seeing it clearly, sounds like, rostox. (And, btw, welcome to the forum!)
.
Just to say explicitly what is implicit in several of the posts about it: this is amusing, but even when it is a standardized error (if it ever is) it is unlikely to be fully eggcornish. Perps are quite unlikely to mean, in the contexts where it shows up, “sick, but not (yet) dead”.
.
It is possible, of course, that they have extended the semantics of diseased to the logical limit, i.e. till the patient is actually dead, but if so, that is a bit of a different thing from a standard eggcorn. In normal usage there is such a strong opposition between diseased (or other kinds of sick ) and dead that such a development would be anomalous and an appeal to it gratuitous (or dubitional, or dubicious, or whatever the appropriate adjective is).


*If the human mind were simple enough for us to understand,
we would be too simple-minded to understand it* .

(Possible Corollary: it is, and we are .)

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