ChatterBank2 mins ago
Why is there no U in forty?
24 Answers
Surely there should be
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In Old English, it was spelt feuortig...by the 14th century (Chaucer) it was spelt fourty... and not until the very end of the 17th century was it spelt forty. In other words, it - like multitudes of other English words - went through a process of simplification over time.
(The letter I've given as 'g' in feuortig would have sounded more like the 'ch' in Johann Sebastian Bach, much as the 'g' in the German word for forty - vierzig - is.)
(The letter I've given as 'g' in feuortig would have sounded more like the 'ch' in Johann Sebastian Bach, much as the 'g' in the German word for forty - vierzig - is.)
All these numbers went through similar changes over time, PB, so the fact that they are not identical in 'shape' is not wholly surprising. In Old English, for example, we had threeotynne...by the 14th century, thritten...and by the 17th century, thirteen. Note how the vowel 'i' remained IN FRONT of the consonant 'r' for about three quarters of a millennium, before moving to its present position.
Re forty, the basic word four originally had an 'ow' sound, as it still does in parts of Scotland, "What time is it?" "It's half past fower." When it took on the simpler 'oh' sound in English speech, the 'u' was really superfluous and so disappeared from the spelling.
Re forty, the basic word four originally had an 'ow' sound, as it still does in parts of Scotland, "What time is it?" "It's half past fower." When it took on the simpler 'oh' sound in English speech, the 'u' was really superfluous and so disappeared from the spelling.