Tuesday
‘You can’t help respecting anybody who can
spell TUESDAY, even if he doesn’t spell it right; but spelling isn’t everything.
There are days when spelling Tuesday simply doesn’t count’.
Rabbit of
Owl in AA Milne, The House at Pooh Corner,
chapter 5
Tuesday is derived from the name of the
Germanic sky god Tiw, a word which is ultimately related to the Latin word deus ‘god’. It was used to replace the Roman name for the
third day of the week, Martis dies,
the day of Mars (the origin of French Mardi). The decision to replace the Roman god Mars
with Tiw was probably motivated by their common association with war. The word was spelled Tywesdæg in Old
English; in Middle English there were numerous variations, including tiwersday, thuisday and tisedai. Looking through the list of over 100 variant
spellings cited by the OED, including
twisday, teysday, tyousday, it’s easy
to agree with Rabbit that being able to spell Tuesday is an impressive feat.
The most
common misspelling of this word today is Teusday:
a form which is defended in Urban
Dictionary as an acceptable alternative.
One definition states ‘It’s usually a misspelling, but it doesn’t have
to be anymore’, while another claims it as an ‘Alternate spelling for Tuesday
that better people use’. The band of
librarians responsible for the blog ‘Typo of the day’ would disagree. In a post from November 2010 they declared
war against incorrect spellings of Tuesday
such as Teusday, Tusday, Tueday and Truesday. But spellings like these are not simply the
result of careless typists or the more relaxed attitude to spelling found
online; the publication of C.S. Lewis’s letters revealed that he regularly
spelled this word Teusday. Perhaps Lewis’s wide reading in Medieval
literature meant that he was deliberately reviving an earlier spelling, or
perhaps he agreed with Owl that there are some days when spelling Tuesday
correctly just doesn’t matter.
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