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Coffee Shop
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<blockquote data-quote="MillIronQH" data-source="post: 348051" data-attributes="member: 4658"><p>WORD HISTORY: </p><p>The crayfish, also known as the crawfish, owes its name to a misunderstanding. The actual source of the word may be the Old High German word krebiz, "edible crustacean," or a word related to it. From this Germanic source came Old French crevice, which when taken into English became crevise (first recorded in a document written in 1311-1312). In Old French and Middle English these words designated the crayfish. People began to pronounce and spell the last part of this word as if it were fish, the first fish spelling being recorded in 1555. Because of a variation in Anglo-Norman pronunciation, two forms of the word have come down to Modern English: crayfish and crawfish. </p><p></p><p>In South Louisiana they are also known as mudbugs or crawdads. :lol: :lol: Z</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MillIronQH, post: 348051, member: 4658"] WORD HISTORY: The crayfish, also known as the crawfish, owes its name to a misunderstanding. The actual source of the word may be the Old High German word krebiz, "edible crustacean," or a word related to it. From this Germanic source came Old French crevice, which when taken into English became crevise (first recorded in a document written in 1311-1312). In Old French and Middle English these words designated the crayfish. People began to pronounce and spell the last part of this word as if it were fish, the first fish spelling being recorded in 1555. Because of a variation in Anglo-Norman pronunciation, two forms of the word have come down to Modern English: crayfish and crawfish. In South Louisiana they are also known as mudbugs or crawdads. :lol: :lol: Z [/QUOTE]
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