I'm a classics student. Consulting dictionaries is beyond habit and approaching compulsion.
Ghavrel Send a noteboard - 02/06/2010 02:08:45 AM
You know as well as I do how the word is used by people in the United States, even by the fully educated. Minutia, in this country among English speakers, is generally understood to describe small details in the plural.
The reason I consulted the dictionary was because my experience is the opposite of yours; I don't know anyone who says "minutia." At first I thought you were confused about the pronunciation of it, because I can't ever remember seeing or hearing "minutia."
And I think the "usually used in plural" means that minutiae, the plural, is used--not that minutia is used as a plural.
"We feel safe when we read what we recognise, what does not challenge our way of thinking.... a steady acceptance of pre-arranged patterns leads to the inability to question what we are told."
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
Excruciatingly painful minutia of my life
- 02/06/2010 12:00:19 AM
660 Views
It's "minutiae" - otherwise it's in the singular. *NM*
- 02/06/2010 12:36:54 AM
176 Views
Not really. The English usage/spelling of the word is minutia.
- 02/06/2010 12:44:06 AM
367 Views
~pulls up a lawn chair with cold drinks and popcorn and settles in~ *NM*
- 02/06/2010 12:47:15 AM
178 Views
LOL
- 02/06/2010 12:52:44 AM
366 Views
I'd say "stadia" and "podia" if for some reason I were inclined to make those words plural.
- 02/06/2010 05:00:53 AM
392 Views
I didn't say that they were the same usage rules.
- 02/06/2010 06:18:53 AM
393 Views
Don't people have both gender (social construct) and sex (biological fact)? *NM*
- 02/06/2010 11:25:36 PM
182 Views
No, people do not have a gender.
- 03/06/2010 12:16:18 AM
365 Views
The OED doesn't give any example of "minutia" being used as plural. *NM*
- 02/06/2010 12:53:23 AM
159 Views
I didn't consult the OED. I feel sad for you that you felt the need to do so.
- 02/06/2010 12:58:12 AM
572 Views
I think the point is that most people use "minutiae" and never use the singular.
- 02/06/2010 01:02:22 AM
351 Views
Of course it has more entries.
- 02/06/2010 01:12:31 AM
366 Views
let me see if I've got this....
- 02/06/2010 01:23:55 AM
556 Views
You won't be laughing when I release that licking sex picture to the mediums!
- 02/06/2010 01:27:39 AM
383 Views
What will the mediums do? Commune with the ghost of Buddy Holly to get his opinion? *NM*
- 02/06/2010 01:43:35 AM
171 Views
No, the Big Bopper. You know it's him when he says "Hello, baby!" *NM*
- 02/06/2010 05:16:57 AM
154 Views
Pronunciation in Latin
- 02/06/2010 03:15:10 AM
380 Views
I'm a classics student. Consulting dictionaries is beyond habit and approaching compulsion.
- 02/06/2010 02:08:45 AM
382 Views
A sex addiction would be much more pleasurable compulsion, y'know.
- 02/06/2010 02:32:51 AM
501 Views
The two aren't mutually exclusive, just kinky. *NM*
- 02/06/2010 04:09:50 AM
166 Views
I think you should use the OED to find out the definition of kinky.
- 02/06/2010 04:25:32 AM
385 Views
You don't think a dictionary fetish is kinky? Buddy, I don't think I'm the one needing the OED.
*NM*
- 02/06/2010 05:20:55 AM
176 Views
*NM*
- 02/06/2010 05:20:55 AM
176 Views
Bitch, that ain't kinky. It's just....odd. *NM*
- 02/06/2010 06:28:25 AM
153 Views
Re: I'm a classics student. Consulting dictionaries is beyond habit and approaching compulsion.
- 02/06/2010 04:58:28 AM
379 Views
It may surprise you to learn that not all of my friends are classics students.
- 02/06/2010 05:21:24 AM
351 Views
- 02/06/2010 05:21:24 AM
351 Views
The other thing is that people don't know how to pronounce the difference between the two.
- 02/06/2010 03:12:10 AM
337 Views

