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celly



 
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celly #1 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 14:39 pm   celly
 

Hi everyone! I'm doing English lesson #8 and have just listened to the audio about mobiles / cell phones. I've also heard "celly". Is it slang, colloquial? Is it US?

In Italian we say "cellulare" and also use "telefonino", which is sort of a "diminutive" form for "telefono" (= telephone) but refers to a cell phone / mobile only.
"Celly", with the ending -y, sounds to me like "telefonino", which has -ino, a suffix often used to indicate something "smaller".
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celly #2 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 14:48 pm   celly
 

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Hi Betty,

'Celly' sounds a bit like baby talk to me but maybe in other parts of the world it is acceptable?

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Re: celly #3 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 14:52 pm   Re: celly
 

Betty76 wrote:
I've also heard "celly"..

I know that the other meaning of celly is cellmate, so be careful and make sure that thet context does not allow the other interpretation. =)
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celly #4 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 14:59 pm   celly
 

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Hi OTS,

I agree that could cause complications if for example you said: I'm quite lost without my celly. We always go everywhere together.

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celly #5 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 17:14 pm   celly
 

Hi Betty,

You'll occasionally hear people referring to their cell phone as their 'celly' here in the US. However, I mostly hear it shortened just to 'cell' -- as in 'Call me on my cell.' (Be careful that you do not use 'in' if you tell someone that you're talking on your cell. lol)

Just as the word 'telly' may sound like baby talk to some people but not to others, I suppose a few may think that 'celly' also sounds like baby talk for a device people don't seem to be able to live a single moment without nowadays.

By the way, I've heard a rumor that a mobile phone is sometimes referred to as a 'mobi' in the UK. I wonder how many might think that sounds like baby talk... ;-)


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celly #6 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 17:59 pm   celly
 

Hi Amy,

I have to admit that I've never heard it referred to as a 'mobi' but who knows who calls what, what nowadays. Then, come to think of it, telly is quite common in referring to 'television'.

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celly #7 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 18:17 pm   celly
 

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Hi Betty and everybody,

in Germany, we call a cell phone "handy". I think that's amusing considering that the original English word "handy" has a completely different meaning: skillful, convenient. Even though celly sounds a bit childlike, I would prefer saying celly to handy.

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celly #8 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 18:26 pm   celly
 

Alan wrote:
telly is quite common in referring to 'television'.
But 'telly' is not commonly used here in the US. That's a word I've only heard used by Brits.

Cgk wrote:
in Germany, we call a cell phone "handy"
Hi Claudia,

I lived in Germany for 18 years and the Germans are the only people I've ever heard use 'Handy' to talk about a cell phone/mobile phone. I remember that a lot of Germans thought that the nickname 'Handy' had been borrowed from English, but this seems to be strictly a German invention -- possibly derived from Handtelefon.
:-)

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celly #9 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 19:20 pm   celly
 

Hi Esl_Expert,

thank you for the info. The ending -y is not commonly used in German. I think that's why so many Germans thought that "handy" was borrowed from English.

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celly #10 (permalink) Thu Feb 10, 2011 20:22 pm   celly
 

Hi Claudia,

I used to live in Swabia, and I remember a joke that the Swabians used to tell constantly about the origin of the word 'Handy'. They always said that it comes from this question about such a phone (because it was supposedly a commonly asked question when cell phones first appeared): "Hän die koi Schnur?"
lol

I've always enjoyed that story. Who knows. Maybe lots of things are behind the name Handy. :-)
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celly #11 (permalink) Fri Feb 11, 2011 14:09 pm   celly
 

Hi Esl_Expert,

lol, yeah, that one is pretty funny. There are, in fact, a lot of Germans who refuse to spell "Handy" and write it as "Händie" instead. When I see that, I always pretend to pout and say, "But there's no such thing as a Händ!"

Claudia

P.S. If the ending -y were indeed the -ino in Italian and "celly" therefore "telefonino" (little telephone), then "handy" would mean "Händchen" (little hand) in German. ;-)
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