What's the deal with "fiery"?
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Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Flying Over Ancient Lands
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Chapters
00:00 What'S The Deal With &Quot;Fiery&Quot;?
00:16 Accepted Answer Score 23
00:47 Answer 2 Score 1
01:32 Thank you
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Full question
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Tags
#etymology #pronunciation #orthography #suffixes
#avk47
ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 23
The Online Etymology Dictionary explains the unusual spelling:
late 13c., from Middle English fier “fire” (see fire (n.)) + -y (2). The spelling is a relic of one of the attempts to render Old English “y” in fyr in a changing system of vowel sounds.
Words like miry (late 14c.) and wiry (1580s) have later origins and different etymology, so they don’t have the same influence on their spelling.
ANSWER 2
Score 1
Fiery seems to be a modern Eng. corruption of the Old English word 'fier',fyr or fyrr an adverb meaning, [farther] or as a noun for the number [four vide feower]. The 'Y' added is a suffix from French donoting nouns or adjectives. Fie by itself is an older exclamation denoting contempt or dislike. -ry is a suffix written sometimes after vowels or diphthongs, representing Old French forms in -rie, and -erie. Sources: Webster's 1828 Dictionary; Shorter OED, vol 2,n-z 1934; Bosworth-Toller Anglo-Saxon dictionary 1898 and A Concise Anglo-Saxon dictionary by John R. Clark Hall, 1916