Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for November 18, 2021

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    BE THIS GUY  about 3 years ago

    Only if you’re playing a Cymraeg version of scrabble.

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    POGGERS {person}  about 3 years ago

    Wait really?

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    Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus Premium Member about 3 years ago

    CRWTH could be a Polish word.

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    Concretionist  about 3 years ago

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crwth

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    Robin Harwood  about 3 years ago

    What do you mean, Pig? W and ŵ are vowels.

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    tudza Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Didn’t the Welsh sell all their vowels to the French?

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    Templo S.U.D.  about 3 years ago

    No, Pig, that’s “tk tht, stpd vwls.”

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    Johnny Q Premium Member about 3 years ago

    And the name Gladys originated in Wales, where they spelled it Gwl-!

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    unfair.de  about 3 years ago

    Finnish speaking People would disagree. You can’t forgo the use of vowels, they even use 8 different ones a [a], o [o], u [u], e [e], i [i], ä [æ], ö [ø], and y [y]. You might perhaps ignore the consonants.

    Älä rääkkää kääkkää kääkänrääkkääjä! En mä kääkkää rääkkääkkään. Älä kääkätä kääkänrääkkäämisestä. (coutesy of https://telefinn.blogspot.com/2012/07/vowel-fest.html)

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    ronaldspence  about 3 years ago

    I am consistently impressed by the use of this social platform without being polarizing…thanks Mr Pastis!

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    BasilBruce  about 3 years ago

    This strip’s new title: “Vital Social Issues ‘n’ Stuff with Rat.”

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    blunebottle  about 3 years ago

    Kids, go tell your mothers you can, too, learn things from comic strips.

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    blunebottle  about 3 years ago

    I have a granddaughter with an Irish middle name. I can’t pronounce it and I don’t remember how it is spelled.

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    B UTTONS  about 3 years ago

    What matters is — great bacon comes from a well-fed pig.

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    Cornelius Noodleman  about 3 years ago

    A. E. I o u $10.

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    _lounger_  about 3 years ago

    that’s life saving for sure

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    dadoctah  about 3 years ago

    Another valid Scrabble word is OXYPHENBUTAZONE. Played in the proper spot on the board (i.e., along any of the four edges), it combines letter scores with various bonus squares and the “bingo” for using all seven tiles in your rack for a possible score of 1458 points (1778 if it locks into certain specific crossing words as well). It has actually been possible in the past for a player to do it in an actual game.

    (Since it obviously has more than seven letters, it relies on a few internal words such as HEN, BUT and/or ONE to have already been played in appropriate spots in earlier rounds of the game.)

    Wikipedia’s article on the word describes it as a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, but spends almost as much space describing the word’s significance in Scrabble.

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    Gandalf  about 3 years ago

    ‘W’ is a vowel; it’s literally a double u!

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    GlenGoodwin  about 3 years ago

    Its a song by counting crowths

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    Purple People Eater  about 3 years ago

    Who needs vowels? I went to Wales once, and I bought a booklet about a place I visited. The booklet was in both Welsh and English, and I noticed the word “hw” on the Welsh side.

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    AlanM  about 3 years ago

    I just checked. “syzygy” is a valid scrabble word and just uses “sometimes Y” as a vowel.

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    Allen Howell Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Not valid in the US – it’s Welsh!

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    Kaputnik  about 3 years ago

    As plenty of people have already observed, it’s a real word. I also verified that it’s in the Collins list of official scrabble words. But that book isn’t very informative; it lists the words without defining them. I had to go to the Internet to find what it actually means.

    I did guess, though, that if it was a real word, it would be Welsh.

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    Casey Jones  about 3 years ago

    Looks Welsh

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    Zebrastripes  about 3 years ago

    Rat and Pig are always on different pages….they’ll never get “it”!

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    chris_o42  about 3 years ago

    Really? I’m writing that one down.

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    Ellis97  about 3 years ago

    Some issues I would like to discuss is the system and low standards of Hollywood, especially when it comes to animated films.

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    Huckleberry Hiroshima  about 3 years ago

    Can Rat Wear Trousers Here?

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    Snolep  about 3 years ago

    Then there’s Musk’s kid X ae x=12 or some such.

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    e.groves  about 3 years ago

    Rhythm. Another word without any vowels.

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    kartis  about 3 years ago

    There are truths, and then there are are trths.

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    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Coincidentally, just yesterday I had occasion to post this on a different strip:

    I’d contend that y is always a vowel, because most of the time it’s pronounced like a long ē. Try it yourself: ē-ule, lan-ē-ard, poetr-ē. The exceptions are when it’s like a long ī (as in den-ī) or a short ĭ (as in acr-ĭ-lic) or when it’s just an unpronounced helper letter, as in stay.

    Same deal with the w, which is typically pronounced o͞o or o͡u (o͞o-et; c-o͡u-er; whiskey, actually pronounced h-o͞o-iskey), except when it too is an unpronounced helper vowel, as in blow. This ignores the most frequently cited use of w as a vowel, in the Welsh word cwm (pronounced ko͞om, a steep-sided hollow), because I was concentrating on English usage, and all bets are off once we start introducing foreign languages.

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    Steverino Premium Member about 3 years ago

    This strip makes me want to have a vowel movement.

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    Spence12 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    My Scrabble software says yes. Now, if I can only remember it when I need it.

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    Tallguy  about 3 years ago

    Looks Welsh.

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    uniquename  about 3 years ago

    ♪♫ “…and sometimes Y and W.” ♫♪

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    Comicfan (I can't think of a better name)   about 3 years ago

    The only Welsh words i know is the words in Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau which is the anthem of the country

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    raybarb44  about 3 years ago

    “Vowels are A E I O U and sometimes Y and W.” Learned that 65 years ago in grammar school. Never got an example of a word using W like that until today though……

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    Bramosenos Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Welsh vowels: A E I O U W Y. Ah Eh Ee Oh Ee (somewhat like German umlaut U) Oo Uh Alphabet: A B C CH D DD E F FF G NG H I L LL M N O P PH R RH S T TH U W Y. For us the Celtic languages are a tad weird. Y can be pronounced Uh, Ee or Ih. Yep. Those are double consonants. F is V and FF is F.

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    PoodleGroomer  about 3 years ago

    There are language-specific Scrabble letter sets with extra consonants and accented vowels needed to spell words in their language.

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    198.23.5.11  about 3 years ago

    So is “antidisenstablishmentarianism”.

    But I’m not holding my breath waiting for that one either.

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    Cozmik Cowboy  about 3 years ago

    My dad had a college football teammate named Ckrypzyck (IIRC; that’s pretty close, anyway); apparently it was quite amuzing to kisten the announcers at away games trying to pronounce it (it’s “SKRIPzik”)

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    WCraft Premium Member about 3 years ago

    My late step-father (died of Covid last year) was a master at making up words in Scrabble. Two that I can remember: Zot and Oho. The first one, Zot, is used often in BC with the anteaters but I don’t think it is an actual word.

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    codedaddy  about 3 years ago

    “crwth” was a valid word long before Scrabble existed.

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    amaneaux  about 3 years ago

    “Cwm” is also a valid Scrabble word. (It’s a steep-walled valley formed by the action of glaciers, also known as a cirque.)

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    stringer831  about 3 years ago

    Rat must have grown up in Bala Cynwyd.

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    Lana M.  about 3 years ago

    Croc Power!!!!

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    jtrevor99  about 3 years ago

    Per Google Trends, no significant change in looking up “Crwth”. Yet. https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?geo=US&q=crwth%20definition

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    Brian Fink  about 3 years ago

    Covefe!

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    Linguist  about 3 years ago

    Fel y byddai’r Cymry yn dweud, perlau yw hwn cyn y moch

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    Goat from PBS  about 3 years ago

    If Rat continues to give valid Scrabble words, I’ll start listening a lot more.

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    zeexenon  about 3 years ago

    Past participle of crawl.

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    Lana M.  about 3 years ago

    @Richard S RussellAEIOUYW are all vowels in American English. Depending upon where they appear in any particular word, they can be different vowels or vowel sounds slid together.

    E.g., ‘yes’ is ‘ee eh ss’, and ‘out’ is ‘ah (o) oo t’ and ‘well’ is ‘oo eh ll’ and ‘ate’ is ‘eh ee t’ .

    At the beginning of a word, W is typically ‘oo’ slid into whatever vowel follows it, and Y is typically ‘ee’ slid into whatever vowel follows it. Knowing this may help the non-native speaker more than the old AEIOU and sometimes Y and W list of vowels.

    Admittedly, I am a physicist and mathematician rather than a philologist, but my wife (whose profile this is) and I both speak more than one language, and often have discussions like this.

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    Rocky Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Once again my horizons are broadened and my vocabulary expanded by Pearls Before Swine!Thank you, Rat!

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    stamps  about 3 years ago

    And the CRWTH shall set you free.

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    Sephten  about 3 years ago

    I played a crwth once, very badly; I’ll stick to the guitar! (I’m rubbish on the five-string banjo too, but I don’t think there’s a connection.)

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    knight1192a  about 3 years ago

    It is? Must be a Welshman who put it in the Scrabble dictionary.

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    Bilan  about 3 years ago

    A lot of chatter about missing vowels, but nobody really answered the question. Can you use a Welsh word in Scrabble? At least in the American version.

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    Natarose  about 3 years ago

    I would take any information gained from this comic with a grain of salt.

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    qmwnebrvt  about 3 years ago

    QUONE

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    Sailor46 USN 65-95  about 3 years ago

    Cwm and crwth are both English words, so says the internet, and we all know it’s never wrong.

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    Pgalden1 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    It IS! Yep, had to look it up.

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    Sisyphos  about 3 years ago

    I have never liked working the Crowd Scene. And now I think I know why! Imprecations upon thee, Cartoon-Boy!

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    AndrewSharpe  about 3 years ago

    Also, CWM. Don’t believe me? Look it up.

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    Otis Rufus Driftwood  about 3 years ago

    Goat has a point, but you have to do it right. Don’t be the hammer that only sees nails. Or a Rat seeking redress of his own pettiness to. See the 11/19/2021 strip. (I skipped yesterday and am playing catch up).

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    Comicfan (I can't think of a better name)   about 3 years ago

    What’s wrong with vowels

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    D.Deene  about 3 years ago

    it’s not shiny enough already??

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