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Darkoshi ([personal profile] darkoshi) wrote2022-11-13 12:42 am
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indubitably buoyant words

Tongue twister: Indubitably undebatable; undebatably indubitable.

(Despite "Indubitably, my dear Watson"*, I have a hard time remembering the doob syllable should be accented.)

Heard on TV: "Feeling buoyed".
(I believe it was said in regards to a town receiving support after the recent hurricane.)
The speaker pronounced it "feeling boo-ied", which is an accepted pronunciation for the word, but that sounds similar to "booed" to me. As "booed" and "buoyed" have rather opposite meanings, it seems a bad word choice to me. I would pronounce it more like "boid" or "bwoid", which wouldn't have the same problem.

Word! Word up! (interjections)
https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/25086/what-are-the-meaning-and-possible-origin-of-word-and-word-up


*It seems that phrase doesn't even occur anywhere in The Complete Sherlock Holmes. There are many instances of "my dear Watson", but none of "indubitable" or "indubitably". Was the phrase used in one of the TV series then, or where did it originate?
frith: Blue pegasus with rainbow mane, thinking in cloud (FIM Rainbow think)

[personal profile] frith 2022-11-13 09:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Whence indubitably. Perhaps Star Trek TNG? It sounds like something Data might say. It's seems mostly to be a snobish way to say 'undoubtedly". Indubitably pops up in the dialog in the 1944 movie The Spider Woman.
Edited (movie quote) 2022-11-13 22:19 (UTC)