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|    Message 129,006 of 130,039    |
|    Kate to Kate    |
|    Re: Parents and Masters    |
|    15 Apr 19 11:14:17    |
   
   From: ktms@live.com   
      
   "Tony Proctor" wrote in message   
   news:8fc9c34c-cbe2-ac6b-3dbd-ce56566ed154@proctor_NoMore_SPAM.net...   
      
   On 14/04/2019 01:57, Kate wrote:   
   >   
   >   
   > "Tony Proctor" wrote in message news:q8q1mh$74m$1@gioia.aioe.org...   
   >   
   > I came across this phrase ("Index of Parents and Masters"), and associated   
   > prefixes "p. to ..." and "p. of ...", in a document of 18th Century   
   > Freemen   
   > of the city of Leicester.   
   >   
   > The usage is clearly not that of present-day "parents", and appears to be   
   > related to apprenticeships.   
   >   
   > Can someone enlighten me of whether this was an accepted usage at that   
   > time, whether how it might have differed from "master"?   
   >   
   > Tony Proctor   
   >   
   > I found the following on Google   
   >   
   > Verb   
   > (third-person singular simple present prentices, present participle   
   > prenticing, simple past and past participle prenticed)   
   > (obsolete) To apprentice.   
   > Origin   
   > An old (Middle English) aphetic form of apprentice; that is, a form which   
   > lost the unstressed initial vowel a and reduced the initial double pp to a   
   > single p.   
   >   
   > Regards   
   >   
   > Kate   
   > Sydney, Australia   
      
   You didn't provide a link to your find, Kate, or say which word you were   
   actually looking up. However, I think I found the same information under   
   https://www.yourdictionary.com/prentice.   
      
   So, I believe you were saying the the "p" stood for "prentice" rather than   
   to "parent". I hadn't considered this, and was already steered down the   
   "parent" route by another researcher.   
      
   I think you have solved the problem so many thanks for your input, Kate.   
      
   Tony   
      
   I should have supplied the link, sorry about that but you have found the one   
   I used.   
      
   Regards   
      
   Kate   
   Sydney, Australia   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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