valeyard89 t1_iuhwl6b wrote
Reply to comment by thisisa_fake_account in ELI5 How did knights participate in tournaments like jousting without killing themselves? by QuantumHamster
as'soc'iation football
amazingmikeyc t1_iui2p3e wrote
yeah i don't get why it's called Soccer not Sosha.
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edit: ie association is pronounced asso-sia-tion or asso-shi-ation not assoc-iation so where does the hard C come from?
drafterman t1_iuj4sfb wrote
Because it's never been a rule that abbreviations have to inherit the pronunciation of their parent word. The Hard C probably comes from it sounding better.
UncontrolableUrge t1_iuidrmn wrote
English Oxford lang. Same reason a 10 pound note is a tenner.
Plane_Chance863 t1_iujxm2s wrote
Dunno, but at university the math society was abbreviated to math soc, with a hard c. So it was probably already a common abbreviation, and soccer came naturally later.
thisisa_fake_account t1_iui5bfr wrote
Because the Americans decided they would find an unnecessarily complicated name instead of going with the obvious one.
"What is this game"
"There's a ball, and you kick, dribble and shoot it with your feet"
"let's call it soccer"
"Why not football?"
"We already have football"
"Why is it called football"
"Because the ball is almost a foot long"
"Aren't balls supposed to be round?"
"..."
"..."
"SOCCER!"
"Soccer!"
amazingmikeyc t1_iui8xry wrote
nah the term soccer originates in the uk, it's an abbreviation of Association Football, hence my comment. Before soccer became the only "football" there are/were lots of games called it, notably Rugby Football
Necessary_Fig_2265 t1_iui9nvf wrote
Except Americans did not name the sport soccer.
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