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- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!scylla!harper
- From: harper@oracorp.com (Douglas Harper)
- Subject: How's it hanging? (was Re: What's cooking?)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.170942.15605@oracorp.com>
- Organization: ORA Corporation, Ithaca, New York
- References: <BxvMIH.JvE@cs.psu.edu> <1ec3g6INNrep@agate.berkeley.edu> <BxxAC1.Ms4@cck.coventry.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 17:09:42 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <BxxAC1.Ms4@cck.coventry.ac.uk> idx009@cck.coventry.ac.uk (the Crisco Kid) writes:
- >In article <1ec3g6INNrep@agate.berkeley.edu> dgreen@thor (David Greenebaum) writes:
- >>ad says, "An Italian masterpiece IS HANGING in a museum." (Note
- >>that for human beings, the past participle is not hung, but hanged:
- >>"He was hanged at dawn.")
- >
- >But people aren't "hanged like a horse" :)
-
- Sheesh, Kay, leave us some illusions... :-)
-
- Seriously though, back to the past participle. The rule is a little
- more complicated, the way I understand it. An animate being was hanged
- if its death came by hanging. An inanimate object was hung when it was
- dangled somewhere. So it's proper to say (apologies to Mel Brooks):
-
- The cowboy and his horse were hanged at dawn. Their corpses
- were hung in the public square afterwards.
-
- -- Doug (never hanged like a horsethief) Harper
-
- P.S. It may even be more complicated. The corpse of Cromwell was
- disinterred and then (hanged/hung) for a traitor and regicide. Which
- is it? I'd say "hanged" there because the intent was to treat the
- corpse as though it were animate and could suffer punishment. The same
- way, you might say that an effigy of <choose a politician or sports
- official> was hanged.
-
- Opinions?
- --
- Douglas Harper | harper@oracorp.com | +1 (607) 277-2020
-