It’s also weird to think it’s somehow significant, since lots of things have dactylic meter. Including “Alabama” and “California.” Or “Jeffrey Mallet,” for that matter.
I know many, many things; what a dactyl is and how to spell…….that river’s name are not, alas, among them (but I’m going to dictionary.com right now to rectify half of that – and I’m guessing it’s not a flying dinosaur).
What Caulfield left out is its etymological history. Uneven education here.
Mississippi
originally the name of the river, from the French rendering of an Algonquian name (French missionaries first penetrated the river valley in its upper reaches) meaning “big river;” compare Ojibwa mshi- “big,” ziibi “river.” Organized as a U.S. territory 1798; admitted as a state 1817. Related: Mississippian (by 1775; as a geological period, by 1891).
In 1666 French explorers somewhere in the western Great Lakes region encountered the Ojibwa name and rendered it as Messipi. The French then took the name with them as they went down the Big River to its delta, and it eventually superseded all the other names for the Big River used by local Indian tribes and by earlier Spanish explorers. Later, in 1798, Congress applied the Ojibwa name of the river to the territory of Mississippi, newly organized from lands inhabited by the Natchez, Choctaw, and Chickasaw.
boydpercy Premium Member over 2 years ago
M i crooked letter crooked letter i crooked letter crooked letter i humpback humpback i!
Avalon over 2 years ago
The missing ‘s’ is on Frazz’s shirt :)
Sanspareil over 2 years ago
Frazz didn’t have to go all Ptero on Caulfield!
zmech13 Premium Member over 2 years ago
Unlike everyone else (so far), I learned it as
M – i – double ‘s’ – i – double ‘s’ – i – double ‘p’ – i
Pocosdad over 2 years ago
I seem to remember the kids on The Mickey Mouse club reciting a little jingle that broke it up as “MISS – ISS – IPPI”. I still use that today.
Mugens Premium Member over 2 years ago
Frazz is 100% correct with his question in panel #3.
Ignatz Premium Member over 2 years ago
The s makes no difference in the Dactylic Meter.
It’s also weird to think it’s somehow significant, since lots of things have dactylic meter. Including “Alabama” and “California.” Or “Jeffrey Mallet,” for that matter.
Twelve Badgers in a Suit Premium Member over 2 years ago
Dactyls make sense. The spelling of Mississippi doesn’t.
ksu71 over 2 years ago
♫ In 1814 we took a little trip
Along with Colonel Jackson down the mighty Mississip’
We took a little bacon and we took a little beans
We fought the bloody British in the town of New Orleans ♫
ddjg over 2 years ago
Actually, Caulfield, what you’ve got is catalectic dactylic meter, anyway: The last foot is incomplete . .
BadCreaturesBecomeDems over 2 years ago
poetry…
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member over 2 years ago
In grade school we learned to sing
“M-I-S— S-I-S— S-I-P-P-I
That used to be so hard to spell, it used to make me cry.
But since I studied spelling, now it’s just like apple pie:
M-I-S— S-I-S— S-I-P-P-I."
sandpiper over 2 years ago
Like a lot of education anymore getting the basics down pat are far less important than getting through the government mandated course requirements.
Steverino Premium Member over 2 years ago
I thought a dactyl was a type of dinosaur.
The Wolf In Your Midst over 2 years ago
Now someone explain to me why “Arkansas” ends with a “w” sound but “Kansas” doesn’t.
John Leonard Premium Member over 2 years ago
Well, English is generally spoken with a dactylic meter.
nancy13g over 2 years ago
I could spell it backward better than I could forward, thanks to a jump rope rhyme: i-p-p / i-p-p / i-s-s-i-m!
Flossie Mud Duck over 2 years ago
Who besides me had to look up “dactyl”? That’s my new thing to learn today.
Cozmik Cowboy over 2 years ago
I know many, many things; what a dactyl is and how to spell…….that river’s name are not, alas, among them (but I’m going to dictionary.com right now to rectify half of that – and I’m guessing it’s not a flying dinosaur).
DutchUncle over 2 years ago
M i s S i s S i p p i. There was a song in an old Broadway revue.
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 2 years ago
Hemingway liked Maine. One dac. No tyl.
He saved his appreciation of polydactyly for his cats.
ValancyCarmody Premium Member over 2 years ago
I learned it from this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dpJLBhYdlwY
Not the Smartest Man On the Planet -- Maybe Close Premium Member over 2 years ago
There is also a form of poetry called a “double dactyl.” Very specialized.
Sanspareil over 2 years ago
I heard she sipped a Minnesota.
RonnieAThompson Premium Member over 2 years ago
Dactyl.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dactyl
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 2 years ago
What Caulfield left out is its etymological history. Uneven education here.
Mississippi
originally the name of the river, from the French rendering of an Algonquian name (French missionaries first penetrated the river valley in its upper reaches) meaning “big river;” compare Ojibwa mshi- “big,” ziibi “river.” Organized as a U.S. territory 1798; admitted as a state 1817. Related: Mississippian (by 1775; as a geological period, by 1891).
In 1666 French explorers somewhere in the western Great Lakes region encountered the Ojibwa name and rendered it as Messipi. The French then took the name with them as they went down the Big River to its delta, and it eventually superseded all the other names for the Big River used by local Indian tribes and by earlier Spanish explorers. Later, in 1798, Congress applied the Ojibwa name of the river to the territory of Mississippi, newly organized from lands inhabited by the Natchez, Choctaw, and Chickasaw.
edeloriea14 over 2 years ago
It’s spelled M-i-s-s-i-s-s-i-p-p-i.