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Why did 's' in 'wisard' change to 'z'

English Language & Usage Asked on November 28, 2020

Wizard:

  1. a man in stories who has magic powers
  2. someone who is very good at something

Origin and usage:
The word wizard comes from the Middle English word ‘wys’ meaning ‘wise’. In this sense, it first appeared in English in the early 15th century. As a word used to describe a man with magical powers, wizard did not start to be used until around 1550 – MacMillan Blog

The word wizard is derived from wise.

Wizard -> wise + ard

Wikitionary says wisard is archaic form of wizard.


Wize: Obsolete form of ‘wise’ — Wiktionary


The ‘s’ in wisard changed to ‘z’ and ‘z’ in wize changed to ‘s’.

Questions:

  • Why did the ‘s’ in ‘wisard’ change to ‘z’?
  • Why did the ‘z’ in ‘wize’ change to ‘s’?

3 Answers

A smart* person might have cogni(z|s)ance of another word where the original s changed to a z. According to the OED, this change (in the spelling of cognisance) was due to the fact that the s sounds like a z. But a spelling with the original s also survives.

There are many such words, usually where the z spelling is used in the US and s is used in the UK. In some cases, like seize/seise plus their adjective forms seizable/seisable, the original s spelling is only used in a niche meaning.

I think therefore that wizard switched to a z because that’s what it sounds like. And other words like wise did not because they just kept their old spelling.

* Or someone who knows how to search in the right places :p

Correct answer by Laurel on November 28, 2020

OED:

wise, adj. (n.3 and adv.)

The standard pronunciation with voiced s (z) is presumably derived from the oblique cases. The normal representative of Old English wís with (s), as in ice (Old English ís), survives in some northern dialects; the regular Scots pronunciation is /weis/.

Wizard: Etymology: late Middle English wysar(d, < wys, wis, wiss, wise adj. + -ard suffix. The pronunciation with voiced s (z) follows wisdom and wise.

Answered by Greybeard on November 28, 2020

Because wisard is pronounced as wizard. Wise is also pronounced with z sound. There are many words in which s is pronounced z. like rose = roze but it is not written as roze because the s already gives z sound.

Answered by user382280 on November 28, 2020

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