English Language & Usage Asked on June 20, 2021
I recently saw the word ‘compatriate’ used in a newspaper article. Upon looking it up, suspecting a typo (or even an eggcorn: it is easy to see how compatriot would be mixed-up with expatriate etc.), I was surprised to see Wiktionary vouch for the word with the sole explanation: “Alternative spelling of compatriot”.
However, not only did my googling yield extremely few credible uses of this spelling, none of the dictionaries I have access to have ever heard of it: both dictionary.com and Merriam Webster do not return anything.
While I don’t want to cast unfair aspersions on Wiktionary’s reliability, I find it slightly suspicious that no other online sources mention this spelling…
And if it is an acceptable spelling, I would love to know what is its relation to the main spelling and whether it is tied to particular regional or historical practices.
The OED has no entry for compatriate. The entry for compatriot has no other spelling, and nor do any of the citations, from 1611 to 1871.
I shouldn't worry about casting aspersions on any source whose definitions are not backed either by implicit or explicit evidence.
Correct answer by Barrie England on June 20, 2021
There are ~700 results for ?:compatriate in books; this is relatively rare, esp. compared to compatriot which is 3 orders of magnitude more common in the same corpus.
However, looking at books that also mention the word dictionary I found 'An etymological dictionary of the English language' by Walter William Skeat, unfortunately you can't see in what context it is mentioned there (or if it might have been a scanning error).
EDIT: COHA, COCA and BYU-BNC find no matches (ref).
Answered by Unreason on June 20, 2021
It's amusing to note that expatriot (vs the proper expatriate) is in at least one eggcorn database, while compatriate (vs compatriot) is not. (Not yet, at least.)
Answered by Gnawme on June 20, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Questions
Recent Answers
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP