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Chris -- 2018-04-11

#1 2009-12-13 00:45:57

patschwieterman
Administrator
From: California
Registered: 2005-10-25
Posts: 1680

"pursued lips" for "pursed lips"

This is amazingly common. Books.google.com lists hundreds of examples, including instances in works by Edith Wharton, John le Carre, Bret Harte and James Baldwin. For some reason, it turns up with particular frequency in the work of science fiction writers, including some of the best – Brian Aldiss, Gene Wolfe, Kim Stanley Robinson, and Theodore Sturgeon. “Pursue * lips” has clearly achieved a certain degree of invisibility for some editors.


When you purse your lips, they stick out in front of your face; perhaps some people are reasoning that this provides an image of the lips being “pursued” by the rest of the body – but that feels like a bit of a reach to me. I think it’s more likely to be a WTF typo. Examples:

Elrond pursued his lips and swallowed, uncomfortable with this casual
talk about women.
“Well I hope that Elbereth has a nice time tomorrow night,” muttered
Elrond to himself.
http://www.libraryofmoria.com/glorfinde … member.txt

The Speaker listened to his request, waggled his eyebrows, pursued his lips as if to say something important and then decided not to.
http://tomroeser.com/sectionlist.asp?s= … &year=2007

The General pursued his lips and watched Steve shrewdly for a moment.
http://docsouth.unc.edu/southlit/dixon/dixon.html

I pointed up the hillside and he pursued his lips.
http://www.cordula.ws/stories/trueworth.html
[From a story by Michael G. Coney, a decent SF writer who lived up in Kem’s neck of the woods.]

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#2 2009-12-15 04:32:21

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

Re: "pursued lips" for "pursed lips"

To be so widespread it must surely be an infectious mis-spelling, some sort of acquired spelling-affectation. Lips which are pursued might be particularly kissable I suppose, but for some reason I see pursed lips as likelier to be wrinkled in disapproval with the synonym puckered getting more of the romantic attention.

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#3 2009-12-15 08:37:40

David Bird
Eggcornista
From: The Hammer, Ontario
Registered: 2009-07-28
Posts: 1692

Re: "pursued lips" for "pursed lips"

Pursue in these examples is almost completely invisible to me – I have to stare directly at the word to see that it’s misspelled. It occurs to me that, whereas an eggcorn is a semantic reshaping of a word or phrase, this might be a case where there is a change to the shape of your face that better reflects the meaning of the word . I don’t purse my lips when I say “purse” but I do when I say “pursue”.

Last edited by David Bird (2009-12-15 17:26:29)

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