this post was submitted on 15 Sep 2024
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The physicist who named the particle apparently liked to come up with nonsense words in his head. Later, when trying to decide the spelling, he came across a quote by James Joyce and spelled it "Quark". Unfortunately, the particle rhymes with fork, while the german cheese rhymes with Mark.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/quark
However, there is another interpretation of the quote.
https://www.ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=quark
This sounds very learned and all, but I can't find that standard English verb in the dictionary.
I hadn't read there were so many angles on the word. I had heard it came from Joyce and never dug deeper. I'm surprised that you quoted a passage from Oxford but didn't check the OED. Joyce being Irish, the OED would better document the English he'd have been using. Merriam-Webster and derivatives are American English dictionaries.
From the OED:
Honestly, I'm just surprised physicists don't have a gif/jif thing going on with quork/quark pronunciation.
Huh. I thought I did check OED. Maybe it's cause I don't have a subscription. Or maybe I just mucked up the search.