Tidy-whiteys
Although the Eggcorn Hoard has been moving from the gleaming towers of
Language Log Plaza to Chris Waigl's elegant new warehouse, those of us
here at the home office haven't lost interest in the phenomenon.
Indeed, eggcorniacs (Chris included) are forever faced with trying to
judge what went on in people's minds during the first productions of
some form-meaning pairing that diverges from the pairing previously
current in the speech community. Making these judgments can be a
tough task.
Case in point: tidy-whitey,
as in this cite from Mark Morford's column "Attention, Liberal
Shoppers!" in the March-April 2005 Gay
and Lesbian Review, p. 4:
Does it matter a whit that, say, Fruit
of the Loom underwear gave nearly 100 percent of its corporate
donations to tidy-whitey-wearing Republicans, nearly every one of whom
I'm guessing wouldn't know appetizing undergarments from a flap of
burlap and some string?
(I left in the whole context partly because it amuses me.
But also because it's clear that Morford thinks tighty-whitey underwear
-- white cotton briefs, usually for men -- is boring, while I've always
thought of this label as denoting the kind of men's underwear made
famous by Calvin Klein and aggressively purveyed by 2xist and other
firms, the sort of thing that made it ok for the bodies of straight
guys to be viewed as public objects of desire. So tighty-whiteys (or -whities, if you wish)
call up different connotations for Morford and me, apparently.
But this is Language Log, and here we're all about language, not the
bodies of male models.)
I'm really pretty sure that the expression started life as
tighty-whitey, a (modestly) clever
rhyme that bundles together the tightness of briefs and the whiteness
of their prototypical exemplars, two properties also combined in the
prototypical men's t-shirt.
First complication: the expression occurs in both orders,
whitey-tighty as well as the
reverse. Second complication:
tidy
instead of
tighty. Now,
this makes sense:
tighty is a
novelty,
tidy an established
word, the two are pronounced (almost -- see below) the same, and
tidy has a good meaning in this
context, since the briefs in question might or might not be tight (and
revealing), but they're certainly supposed to be neat and clean, that
is, tidy.
The raw Google net hits are in favor of the t-word first and in favor
of
tighty over
tidy as that t-word:
|
tighty
|
tidy
|
t - w
|
5,150
|
190
|
w - t
|
3,070
|
13
|
Things are much the same in the plural, though now there are two
plurals for
whitey:
whities and
whiteys, with the
first preferred to the second:
|
tighty
|
tidy
|
t - whities
|
17,400
|
1,740
|
t - whiteys
|
5,820
|
546
|
w - t's
|
2,850
|
144
|
There are (at least) two ways these arrays could come about. If the
expressions have been around for a while, then an original
tidy could have been being
reanalyzed as
tighty by
people who thought tightness was more significant than cleanliness, so
that
tighty eventually
overtook
tidy. These
things happen, and if you don't believe they do, you have another thing
coming.
On the other hand, if the expressions are pretty recent, then this
array reflects incipient reanalysis of original (and still dominant)
tighty as
tidy. I don't (yet) know the
history (it's not in the OED Online, or on the standard word origin
sites), though I'm hoping to extract some of it from colleagues on
ADS-L. But I'm pretty sure that the expressions are relatively
recent, so scenario #2 is the one to go with.
Of course, once the eminently sensible
tidy-whitey is around, people will
pick it up from writing like Morford's, and they will believe that this
is in fact the "correct" form of the expression. They'll treat
tighty-whitey as a
misinterpretation, in fact. I'll bet Morford (or his copyeditor,
or both) is such a person.
On the pronunciation front:
tighty
and
tidy get to be (almost)
the same in pronunciation in American English via intervocalic
flapping, which plays a role in a large number of reinterpretations,
and plain spelling errors too. Interestingly, the two words
aren't necessarily pronounced exactly the same, even if they both have
an intervocalic flap. Full neutralization at the word level turns
out to be rarer than people used to think; often there's some cue as to
the "real" nature of the neutralized segment. For
tighty vs.
tidy, this would be in the length
of the vowel preceding the flap -- shorter in
tighty than in
tidy, at least on the
average. (Morphological relatedness plays some role --
tighty is related to
tight -- and so, probably, does the
spelling system. These aren't simple matters.)
What's really surprising, though, is that
PRONOUNCING such
distinctions can be divorced from
PERCEIVING
them. Many years ago I served as a subject in an experiment run
by Patricia Donegan, who told me that I made a made a (significant)
distinction between the length of the first vowels in
latter vs.
ladder and similar pairs, but
failed totally to perceive my own distinctions. And I was
scarcely alone.
So even if I'm sending out cues that will distinguish
tighty and
tidy, there's no guarantee that
other people will get them. The two words will "sound the same"
(even if they don't quite sound the same, they're really very close);
and one can be reinterpreted as the other.
[Late-breaking (3/19/05) news from ADS-L: (a) Sam Clements's
14-year-old son volunteers that (some version of)
tighty-whitey was in the movie
Porky's (1982), though no one has
verified this. (b) Alice Faber reports a
1993
newsgroup use that glosses the expression unfavorably, in a
reference to "the tighty-whitey (that means that their jockey underwear
is too small, not anything racist, BTW) crybabies". (c) Ben
Zimmer gets things back to 1990 with
a
cite for tighty-whities
("think of boxers as opposed to the traditional Fruit-O-The-Loom/Hanes
'tighty-whities' ") and notes that Connie Eble's
Slang and Sociability (1991)
reports "tighty whities: men's briefs" in use on the UNC-Chapel Hill
campus. And on 3/20/05 Tom Ace complains in e-mail that his
"preferred variant spelling, tightie-whities, wasn't among
those discussed in Language Log" and observes that he often sees the
expression "used with a disparaging connotation, as if white briefs
were the most uncool underwear choice going.
Tightie-whities have become the Rodney Dangerfield of underwear.
It wasn't that way when I was a kid." Ah, fickle fashion!
On the spelling front, Ace's comments moved me to check out uses with
tightie and (for completeness)
tidie and
tidey, also with
whitie and
whity. This increased the
tight- count by 7,886 and the
tid- count by only 534. There
are an amazing number of spellings out there, though, in addition to
the ones in the tables above: for
tight-
+
whit-,
tightie-whitey(
s),
tightie-whitie(
s),
tighty-whity,
tightie-whity; for
tid- +
whit-,
tidy-whitie,
tidie-whitie(
s),
tidie-whitey(
s),
tidy-whity,
tidey-whity,
tidey-whitie(
s),
tidey-whitey(
s); for
whit- +
tight-,
whitie-tightie(
s),
whitie-tighty,
whity-tightie(
s),
whity-tighty; for
whit- +
tid-,
whitie-tidy,
whitie-tidie(
s),
whity-tidy,
whity-tidie(
s),
whity-tidey(
s). If there are any
spellings with
wit- instead
of
whit- or
tit- instead of
tight-, I don't want to hear about
it. The pattern is very clear, anyway:
tight- way over
tid-, and t - w way over w - t.]
zwicky at-sign csli period stanford period edu
Posted by Arnold Zwicky at March 19, 2005 06:20 PM