Eggcorn Forum

Discussions about eggcorns and related topics

You are not logged in.

Announcement

Registrations are currently closed because of a technical problem. Please send email to if you wish to register.

The forum administrator reserves the right to request users to plausibly demonstrate that they are real people with an interest in the topic of eggcorns. Otherwise they may be removed with no further justification. Likewise, accounts that have not been used for posting may be removed.

Thanks for your understanding.

Chris -- 2018-04-11

#1 2008-03-05 18:45:31

hall_damien
Member
Registered: 2008-03-05
Posts: 4

'flea market' > 'flee market'

Spotted in today’s (5 March 2008) Daily Pennsylvanian:

‘Prevor spoke about growth and celebrity licensing as well as his humble beginnings selling T-shirts in flee markets during high school. ’”When we had our booths at the flee market, we would climb on top of a van and yell and scream to the top of our lungs for people to buy our T-shirts,” Prevor said as he mounted a table in the mid-sized lecture hall. During Prevor’s undergraduate career at Penn, the business broke out of its flee market roots into a storefront venue inside Houston Hall.’

from Bianca González, ‘Steve & Barry’s CEO back at Penn’, Daily Pennsylvanian, 5 March 2008, p4:
http://media.www.dailypennsylvanian.com … 1836.shtml

The semantic connection between flea market and flee market could be that these markets are places that people are hurrying through and making hurried purchases (often true, given their size), or else that vendors have to compete very hard in order to get potential customers to buy from them before they flee out of reach. This second analysis makes more sense in the context (see in particular the second instance above). Either way, an eggcorn, I think. It’s relatively common: about 89,400 ghits.

Reflecting the relative uncommonness of the ending _-ea_ in English, this is the third eggcorn in the Forum to feature this confusion:

plea bargain > flee bargain: http://eggcorns.lascribe.net/forum/viewtopic.php?id=768
flea powder > flee powder: http://eggcorns.lascribe.net/forum/viewtopic.php?id=340

Last edited by hall_damien (2008-03-05 18:57:56)

Offline

 

#2 2008-03-06 11:06:27

TootsNYC
Eggcornista
Registered: 2007-06-19
Posts: 263

Re: 'flea market' > 'flee market'

I’d need a stronger evidence of an imagery switch before I’d rule out a simple spelling error.

Though I still have never wrapped my own personal head around the “flea” in “flea market.”

I spell it “flea” because you’re supposed to, not because I believe any true association w/ fleas.

Offline

 

#3 2008-03-06 11:25:48

hall_damien
Member
Registered: 2008-03-05
Posts: 4

Re: 'flea market' > 'flee market'

Yes, there’s been a little discussion of this to that effect on the American Dialect Soc List since I posted it there (search here

http://listserv.linguistlist.org:8080/m … index.html

if you’re interested, searching for ‘flee’ in messages since 2008-03-04). It seems to me, though, that it’s at least a potential eggcorn; not as obviously one as many others, but couldn’t people have thought that the insect was called a <flee> because that’s what it did? I do grant that the eggcorn-ness here is not indisputable.

Offline

 

Board footer

Powered by PunBB
PunBB is © 2002–2005 Rickard Andersson
Individual posters retain the copyright to their posts.

RSS feeds: active topicsall new posts