AxialGem t1_ja76xm6 wrote
Reply to comment by whyvswhynot12089 in Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
>we would have likely taken "human" from the older latin word "humanis".
Possibly. My point is that a loan word tends to adopt the grammar of the language it's adoped into at the time it was adoped.
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If you make some popcorn in a pan, then turn off the heat and add more kernels, the new ones aren't going to be popped. Because the condition which caused the popping has already stopped. Similarly, new loanwords by default aren't affected by a process that has already stopped.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja92jjy wrote
I got your point the first time. I just think history is a lot more variable than heat in a pan. Loan words don't always stop evolving at their point of origin circumstances.
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