What term is being referred to with “reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits”?What did Darren Cross mean with “Word travels fast”

Can a cyclic Amine form an Amide?

Did we get closer to another plane than we were supposed to, or was the pilot just protecting our delicate sensibilities?

When and why did journal article titles become descriptive, rather than creatively allusive?

Packet sniffer for MacOS Mojave and above

Hang 20lb projector screen on Hardieplank

Short story about people living in a different time streams

Any examples of headwear for races with animal ears?

My ID is expired, can I fly to the Bahamas with my passport

Is Cola "probably the best-known" Latin word in the world? If not, which might it be?

How to scale a verbatim environment on a minipage?

How to reply this mail from potential PhD professor?

What happened to Ghost?

Accidentally deleted the "/usr/share" folder

Why do computer-science majors learn calculus?

How did Captain America use this power?

How to creep the reader out with what seems like a normal person?

What does air vanishing on contact sound like?

Unidentified items in bicycle tube repair kit

Transfer over $10k

Stark VS Thanos

Can I use 1000v rectifier diodes instead of 600v rectifier diodes?

Why do freehub and cassette have only one position that matches?

What word means "to make something obsolete"?

Which skill should be used for secret doors or traps: Perception or Investigation?



What term is being referred to with “reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits”?


What did Darren Cross mean with “Word travels fast”






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








63















In The Colour of Magic, on page 46 of my copy, Twoflower says this word:




Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?




What term is being referred to above?



It seems to be like “in-sewer-ants-policy”, i.e. a term that they don’t have a word for in the language (“insurance policy”), but I can’t figure out what it’d be.



I asked two people who couldn’t figure it out, either.










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    Maybe provide a bit more context for this?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:23






  • 5





    @JMac - Additional context isn't really needed when you've read the book.

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 19:32






  • 3





    @Valorum I had read this part of the book and couldn't remember what it was referring to without seeing the answers. It seems strange to me. Does Twoflowers actually say "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?" (doesn't seem right) or was that something Rincewind was thinking after Twoflowers tries to explain to him what he does?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:37






  • 8





    @JMac - Rincewind always transliterates Twoflower's speech into Morporkian. Twoflower is saying "echo-gnomics"

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 21:21






  • 3





    @Randal'Thor yes

    – Quasi_Stomach
    Apr 25 at 20:01

















63















In The Colour of Magic, on page 46 of my copy, Twoflower says this word:




Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?




What term is being referred to above?



It seems to be like “in-sewer-ants-policy”, i.e. a term that they don’t have a word for in the language (“insurance policy”), but I can’t figure out what it’d be.



I asked two people who couldn’t figure it out, either.










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    Maybe provide a bit more context for this?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:23






  • 5





    @JMac - Additional context isn't really needed when you've read the book.

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 19:32






  • 3





    @Valorum I had read this part of the book and couldn't remember what it was referring to without seeing the answers. It seems strange to me. Does Twoflowers actually say "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?" (doesn't seem right) or was that something Rincewind was thinking after Twoflowers tries to explain to him what he does?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:37






  • 8





    @JMac - Rincewind always transliterates Twoflower's speech into Morporkian. Twoflower is saying "echo-gnomics"

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 21:21






  • 3





    @Randal'Thor yes

    – Quasi_Stomach
    Apr 25 at 20:01













63












63








63


4






In The Colour of Magic, on page 46 of my copy, Twoflower says this word:




Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?




What term is being referred to above?



It seems to be like “in-sewer-ants-policy”, i.e. a term that they don’t have a word for in the language (“insurance policy”), but I can’t figure out what it’d be.



I asked two people who couldn’t figure it out, either.










share|improve this question
















In The Colour of Magic, on page 46 of my copy, Twoflower says this word:




Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?




What term is being referred to above?



It seems to be like “in-sewer-ants-policy”, i.e. a term that they don’t have a word for in the language (“insurance policy”), but I can’t figure out what it’d be.



I asked two people who couldn’t figure it out, either.







discworld language-explanation






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 26 at 13:11







Stormblessed

















asked Apr 24 at 19:00









StormblessedStormblessed

3,12521346




3,12521346







  • 5





    Maybe provide a bit more context for this?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:23






  • 5





    @JMac - Additional context isn't really needed when you've read the book.

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 19:32






  • 3





    @Valorum I had read this part of the book and couldn't remember what it was referring to without seeing the answers. It seems strange to me. Does Twoflowers actually say "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?" (doesn't seem right) or was that something Rincewind was thinking after Twoflowers tries to explain to him what he does?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:37






  • 8





    @JMac - Rincewind always transliterates Twoflower's speech into Morporkian. Twoflower is saying "echo-gnomics"

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 21:21






  • 3





    @Randal'Thor yes

    – Quasi_Stomach
    Apr 25 at 20:01












  • 5





    Maybe provide a bit more context for this?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:23






  • 5





    @JMac - Additional context isn't really needed when you've read the book.

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 19:32






  • 3





    @Valorum I had read this part of the book and couldn't remember what it was referring to without seeing the answers. It seems strange to me. Does Twoflowers actually say "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?" (doesn't seem right) or was that something Rincewind was thinking after Twoflowers tries to explain to him what he does?

    – JMac
    Apr 24 at 19:37






  • 8





    @JMac - Rincewind always transliterates Twoflower's speech into Morporkian. Twoflower is saying "echo-gnomics"

    – Valorum
    Apr 24 at 21:21






  • 3





    @Randal'Thor yes

    – Quasi_Stomach
    Apr 25 at 20:01







5




5





Maybe provide a bit more context for this?

– JMac
Apr 24 at 19:23





Maybe provide a bit more context for this?

– JMac
Apr 24 at 19:23




5




5





@JMac - Additional context isn't really needed when you've read the book.

– Valorum
Apr 24 at 19:32





@JMac - Additional context isn't really needed when you've read the book.

– Valorum
Apr 24 at 19:32




3




3





@Valorum I had read this part of the book and couldn't remember what it was referring to without seeing the answers. It seems strange to me. Does Twoflowers actually say "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?" (doesn't seem right) or was that something Rincewind was thinking after Twoflowers tries to explain to him what he does?

– JMac
Apr 24 at 19:37





@Valorum I had read this part of the book and couldn't remember what it was referring to without seeing the answers. It seems strange to me. Does Twoflowers actually say "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits?" (doesn't seem right) or was that something Rincewind was thinking after Twoflowers tries to explain to him what he does?

– JMac
Apr 24 at 19:37




8




8





@JMac - Rincewind always transliterates Twoflower's speech into Morporkian. Twoflower is saying "echo-gnomics"

– Valorum
Apr 24 at 21:21





@JMac - Rincewind always transliterates Twoflower's speech into Morporkian. Twoflower is saying "echo-gnomics"

– Valorum
Apr 24 at 21:21




3




3





@Randal'Thor yes

– Quasi_Stomach
Apr 25 at 20:01





@Randal'Thor yes

– Quasi_Stomach
Apr 25 at 20:01










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















117














The word is "echo-gnomics" ("economics")



An echo is a reflected sound; gnomes live underground.



Etymologically, "gnomes" [mythology] are described as "a legendary race of human-like beings, usually imagined as short and possibly bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc." (Source: wiktionary)



Apparently I've played too much D&D where gnomes aren't specifically tied to the underground.






share|improve this answer




















  • 6





    And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

    – ruakh
    Apr 24 at 19:28






  • 16





    Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

    – Paul
    Apr 25 at 10:47







  • 1





    In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

    – Matthieu M.
    Apr 25 at 11:44



















74














Rincewind tries his hand at a better translation later in the book (emphasis added):




Bloody hell, he thought. He’s alive! Me too. Who’d have thought it? Perhaps there is something in this reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits? It was a cumbersome phrase. Rincewind tried to get his tongue around the thick syllables that were the word in Twoflower’s own language.

“Ecolirix?” he tried. “Ecro-gnothics? Echo-gnomics?”

That would do. That sounded about right.




As with 'insurance', the concept of 'economics' (a reflected sound is an echo, underground spirits are gnomes) is largely unheard of in that part of the disc. Rincewind describes it as 'financial wizardry' (emphasis added):




“Well, my point is, you see, that gold also has its sort of magical field. Sort of financial wizardry. Echo-gnomics.” Rincewind giggled.







share|improve this answer




















  • 33





    Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

    – terdon
    Apr 24 at 22:46






  • 4





    While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

    – Two-Bit Alchemist
    Apr 25 at 17:55






  • 11





    @Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

    – Valorum
    Apr 25 at 18:01






  • 1





    @Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

    – Valorum
    2 days ago






  • 1





    Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

    – Glen_b
    2 days ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "186"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f210720%2fwhat-term-is-being-referred-to-with-reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









117














The word is "echo-gnomics" ("economics")



An echo is a reflected sound; gnomes live underground.



Etymologically, "gnomes" [mythology] are described as "a legendary race of human-like beings, usually imagined as short and possibly bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc." (Source: wiktionary)



Apparently I've played too much D&D where gnomes aren't specifically tied to the underground.






share|improve this answer




















  • 6





    And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

    – ruakh
    Apr 24 at 19:28






  • 16





    Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

    – Paul
    Apr 25 at 10:47







  • 1





    In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

    – Matthieu M.
    Apr 25 at 11:44
















117














The word is "echo-gnomics" ("economics")



An echo is a reflected sound; gnomes live underground.



Etymologically, "gnomes" [mythology] are described as "a legendary race of human-like beings, usually imagined as short and possibly bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc." (Source: wiktionary)



Apparently I've played too much D&D where gnomes aren't specifically tied to the underground.






share|improve this answer




















  • 6





    And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

    – ruakh
    Apr 24 at 19:28






  • 16





    Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

    – Paul
    Apr 25 at 10:47







  • 1





    In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

    – Matthieu M.
    Apr 25 at 11:44














117












117








117







The word is "echo-gnomics" ("economics")



An echo is a reflected sound; gnomes live underground.



Etymologically, "gnomes" [mythology] are described as "a legendary race of human-like beings, usually imagined as short and possibly bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc." (Source: wiktionary)



Apparently I've played too much D&D where gnomes aren't specifically tied to the underground.






share|improve this answer















The word is "echo-gnomics" ("economics")



An echo is a reflected sound; gnomes live underground.



Etymologically, "gnomes" [mythology] are described as "a legendary race of human-like beings, usually imagined as short and possibly bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc." (Source: wiktionary)



Apparently I've played too much D&D where gnomes aren't specifically tied to the underground.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 24 at 19:11

























answered Apr 24 at 19:04









DavidWDavidW

4,88821756




4,88821756







  • 6





    And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

    – ruakh
    Apr 24 at 19:28






  • 16





    Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

    – Paul
    Apr 25 at 10:47







  • 1





    In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

    – Matthieu M.
    Apr 25 at 11:44













  • 6





    And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

    – ruakh
    Apr 24 at 19:28






  • 16





    Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

    – Paul
    Apr 25 at 10:47







  • 1





    In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

    – Matthieu M.
    Apr 25 at 11:44








6




6





And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

– ruakh
Apr 24 at 19:28





And here I thought gnomes dwelt in gardens!

– ruakh
Apr 24 at 19:28




16




16





Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

– Paul
Apr 25 at 10:47






Those are gnomish felons, @ruakh. Gardens are the penal colonies of the gnome race, much like Australia was for Britain at one point. The bright clothing is both a punishment and a guard against escape.

– Paul
Apr 25 at 10:47





1




1





In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

– Matthieu M.
Apr 25 at 11:44






In D&D, gnomes have night vision and live in burrows, so they are pretty tied to underground. Are you mistaking them for halflings?

– Matthieu M.
Apr 25 at 11:44














74














Rincewind tries his hand at a better translation later in the book (emphasis added):




Bloody hell, he thought. He’s alive! Me too. Who’d have thought it? Perhaps there is something in this reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits? It was a cumbersome phrase. Rincewind tried to get his tongue around the thick syllables that were the word in Twoflower’s own language.

“Ecolirix?” he tried. “Ecro-gnothics? Echo-gnomics?”

That would do. That sounded about right.




As with 'insurance', the concept of 'economics' (a reflected sound is an echo, underground spirits are gnomes) is largely unheard of in that part of the disc. Rincewind describes it as 'financial wizardry' (emphasis added):




“Well, my point is, you see, that gold also has its sort of magical field. Sort of financial wizardry. Echo-gnomics.” Rincewind giggled.







share|improve this answer




















  • 33





    Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

    – terdon
    Apr 24 at 22:46






  • 4





    While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

    – Two-Bit Alchemist
    Apr 25 at 17:55






  • 11





    @Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

    – Valorum
    Apr 25 at 18:01






  • 1





    @Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

    – Valorum
    2 days ago






  • 1





    Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

    – Glen_b
    2 days ago















74














Rincewind tries his hand at a better translation later in the book (emphasis added):




Bloody hell, he thought. He’s alive! Me too. Who’d have thought it? Perhaps there is something in this reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits? It was a cumbersome phrase. Rincewind tried to get his tongue around the thick syllables that were the word in Twoflower’s own language.

“Ecolirix?” he tried. “Ecro-gnothics? Echo-gnomics?”

That would do. That sounded about right.




As with 'insurance', the concept of 'economics' (a reflected sound is an echo, underground spirits are gnomes) is largely unheard of in that part of the disc. Rincewind describes it as 'financial wizardry' (emphasis added):




“Well, my point is, you see, that gold also has its sort of magical field. Sort of financial wizardry. Echo-gnomics.” Rincewind giggled.







share|improve this answer




















  • 33





    Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

    – terdon
    Apr 24 at 22:46






  • 4





    While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

    – Two-Bit Alchemist
    Apr 25 at 17:55






  • 11





    @Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

    – Valorum
    Apr 25 at 18:01






  • 1





    @Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

    – Valorum
    2 days ago






  • 1





    Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

    – Glen_b
    2 days ago













74












74








74







Rincewind tries his hand at a better translation later in the book (emphasis added):




Bloody hell, he thought. He’s alive! Me too. Who’d have thought it? Perhaps there is something in this reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits? It was a cumbersome phrase. Rincewind tried to get his tongue around the thick syllables that were the word in Twoflower’s own language.

“Ecolirix?” he tried. “Ecro-gnothics? Echo-gnomics?”

That would do. That sounded about right.




As with 'insurance', the concept of 'economics' (a reflected sound is an echo, underground spirits are gnomes) is largely unheard of in that part of the disc. Rincewind describes it as 'financial wizardry' (emphasis added):




“Well, my point is, you see, that gold also has its sort of magical field. Sort of financial wizardry. Echo-gnomics.” Rincewind giggled.







share|improve this answer















Rincewind tries his hand at a better translation later in the book (emphasis added):




Bloody hell, he thought. He’s alive! Me too. Who’d have thought it? Perhaps there is something in this reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits? It was a cumbersome phrase. Rincewind tried to get his tongue around the thick syllables that were the word in Twoflower’s own language.

“Ecolirix?” he tried. “Ecro-gnothics? Echo-gnomics?”

That would do. That sounded about right.




As with 'insurance', the concept of 'economics' (a reflected sound is an echo, underground spirits are gnomes) is largely unheard of in that part of the disc. Rincewind describes it as 'financial wizardry' (emphasis added):




“Well, my point is, you see, that gold also has its sort of magical field. Sort of financial wizardry. Echo-gnomics.” Rincewind giggled.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 24 at 23:02









Stormblessed

3,12521346




3,12521346










answered Apr 24 at 19:10









ValorumValorum

419k11530413270




419k11530413270







  • 33





    Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

    – terdon
    Apr 24 at 22:46






  • 4





    While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

    – Two-Bit Alchemist
    Apr 25 at 17:55






  • 11





    @Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

    – Valorum
    Apr 25 at 18:01






  • 1





    @Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

    – Valorum
    2 days ago






  • 1





    Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

    – Glen_b
    2 days ago












  • 33





    Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

    – terdon
    Apr 24 at 22:46






  • 4





    While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

    – Two-Bit Alchemist
    Apr 25 at 17:55






  • 11





    @Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

    – Valorum
    Apr 25 at 18:01






  • 1





    @Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

    – Valorum
    2 days ago






  • 1





    Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

    – Glen_b
    2 days ago







33




33





Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

– terdon
Apr 24 at 22:46





Might be worth pointing out that echo-gnomics would be pronounced economics, something that wouldn't be immediately obvious to people fortunate enough to have been raised speaking languages with rational spelling.

– terdon
Apr 24 at 22:46




4




4





While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

– Two-Bit Alchemist
Apr 25 at 17:55





While a fair point, in my accent at least, echo-gnomics and economics sound quite different!

– Two-Bit Alchemist
Apr 25 at 17:55




11




11





@Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

– Valorum
Apr 25 at 18:01





@Two-BitAlchemist - I really can't be held accountable for the way that you colonials butcher the English language

– Valorum
Apr 25 at 18:01




1




1





@Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

– Valorum
2 days ago





@Glen_b - "Gnome" (in RP) would be 'nome' (rhymes with 'home'). "Gnom" (as in gnomon) would usually be 'nom' (rhymes with 'Tom').

– Valorum
2 days ago




1




1





Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

– Glen_b
2 days ago





Ah, I finally get it, you're saying the pronunciation of the "o" shifts when it becomes "-gnomics".

– Glen_b
2 days ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f210720%2fwhat-term-is-being-referred-to-with-reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Category:9 (number) SubcategoriesMedia in category "9 (number)"Navigation menuUpload mediaGND ID: 4485639-8Library of Congress authority ID: sh85091979ReasonatorScholiaStatistics

Circuit construction for execution of conditional statements using least significant bitHow are two different registers being used as “control”?How exactly is the stated composite state of the two registers being produced using the $R_zz$ controlled rotations?Efficiently performing controlled rotations in HHLWould this quantum algorithm implementation work?How to prepare a superposed states of odd integers from $1$ to $sqrtN$?Why is this implementation of the order finding algorithm not working?Circuit construction for Hamiltonian simulationHow can I invert the least significant bit of a certain term of a superposed state?Implementing an oracleImplementing a controlled sum operation

Magento 2 “No Payment Methods” in Admin New OrderHow to integrate Paypal Express Checkout with the Magento APIMagento 1.5 - Sales > Order > edit order and shipping methods disappearAuto Invoice Check/Money Order Payment methodAdd more simple payment methods?Shipping methods not showingWhat should I do to change payment methods if changing the configuration has no effects?1.9 - No Payment Methods showing upMy Payment Methods not Showing for downloadable/virtual product when checkout?Magento2 API to access internal payment methodHow to call an existing payment methods in the registration form?