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crazygringo 18 hours ago

I vote to just change the spelling to what almost everyone already thinks it is anyways.

It'll still be just as weird. But "chs" is just nonsensical. The idea that it would sound like "sh" is baffling. I mean, I know this is English spelling which is not known for its regularity, but this is just too much.

pwdisswordfishy 18 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It comes from the surname of a German botanist. Which just happens to mean "fox". Never had problems with it.

It would probably help if you pronounced it right, with a /ks/.

umanwizard 18 hours ago | parent [-]

The beginning of the English word "fuchsia" is not pronounced like the German word Fuchs, so indeed the spelling does not match the pronunciation. This is independent of the fact that it comes from that word. Plenty of things in English (and, in fact, loanwords in every language) sound different from the words they're derived from; that doesn't mean trying to imitate the source language is the "right" pronunciation. If you pronounce fuchsia like "fuksia" nobody will understand you.

darkwater 15 hours ago | parent [-]

> If you pronounce fuchsia like "fuksia" nobody will understand you.

TIL and yet another case of "English is fucking weird".

9 hours ago | parent | next [-]
[deleted]
debo_ 15 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Fuching weird, even.

darkwater an hour ago | parent [-]

:) Yeah, probably in this case English is doing the right thing, pronunciation wise. Anyway, checking in Google Translate the pronunciation it plays "fuksia", while Wikipedia has the right version.

lloeki 16 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> But "chs" is just nonsensical. The idea that it would sound like "sh" is baffling

In the word "french" C H is pronounced sh and nobody bats an eye, I don't think it's that outlandish that someone once read it as fuch-sia, incorrectly splitting it compared to the original.

In the language French, fuchsia is unequivocally read something more like few-shia, and I'd bet that even though it comes from German Fuchs-ia (fooks-ia) English has picked it up from the French side.

If you find such a loanword weird, don't you dare try reading Japanese.

https://aethermug.com/posts/the-beautiful-dissociation-of-th...

soiltype 16 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> In the word "french" C H is pronounced sh

No, it's not. Unless you think the "n" in french is pronounced "nt".

lloeki 12 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Fine, and legit. I get what I deserve for not looking it up!

Scaramouch and crochet though.

14 hours ago | parent | prev [-]
[deleted]
majoe 15 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Damn, I always thought Fuchsia is just a colour, but today I learned

  - Fuchsia is a flower
  - which is named after a German botanist (Leonhart Fuchs)
  - Fuchsia in English is pronounced completely different than in German. 
  - Google is surprisingly bad at naming their products
crazygringo 14 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> In the word "french" C H is pronounced sh

It's not, though.