Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The original modern usage of "Celt" or "Celtic" was pronounced with a "soft c" as it was taken from French, which uses a "soft c" pronunciation.Inappropriate: Boston Celtics, for two reasons
2. Regardless, the name is a crime because it is supposed to be pronounced Keltic. The team changed the sound of the name for marketing purposes, which is wrong on multiple levels.
Interesting. Thanks. I thought the F.C. was pronounced with a hard c, but it's possible that's because I heard it from someone saying it wrong.The original modern usage of "Celt" or "Celtic" was pronounced with a "soft c" as it was taken from French, which uses a "soft c" pronunciation.
Only after academics got involved was the pronunciation changed to the "hard c" variation based on the Latin root of the French word.
So what has evolved in a modern sense is that the "hard c" pronunciation is used for Celtic history and culture and the "soft c" pronunciation for more modern applications of the word.
Celtic F.C. in Glasgow also uses the "soft c" pronunciation.
Yeah, the Canucks and Texans are just awful. No creativity at all.Why is Charlotte Hornets on the good list? My understanding is that it refers to a Cornwallis quote about Charlotte being a "nest of hornets" during the Revolutionary war, but very few people probably know that origin and it's not really anything that people would tie to the Charlotte area like with the other examples listed in the OP. Like, wouldn't names like the 76ers or 49ers be thought of before "Hornets" as referencing well-known historical events?
Phoenix Suns also belongs on the "appropriate" list. San Diego Padres too. Florida Marlins. Houston Rockets. All very appropriate names.
"Vancouver Canucks" and "Houston Texans" seem like names that are technically appropriate but also sort of lazy.
Put the LA Lakers on the "not appropriate" list with the Jazz, as like with the Jazz the name results from a feature of a previous location where the team played (Minneapolis).