Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Other subjects

What is a baby octopus called?

22 replies

Mamamoor · 10/09/2006 21:00

DD1 wancts to know and I'm afraid neither dh or I know. Can anyone help? Ta.

OP posts:
TooTicky · 10/09/2006 21:04

Octokitten? Octopiddle? Octopup?

southeastastra · 10/09/2006 21:04

ooh i don't know baby octopus i think!

southeastastra · 10/09/2006 21:05

this one is lovely though!

Piffle · 10/09/2006 21:05

its called a baby octopus truly it is

tortoisesdonotwearshoes · 10/09/2006 21:06

All i can find is that its baby octopus.

google it and i get loads of recipes for cooking baby octopus.!

mears · 10/09/2006 21:06

baby ocupus (octopi if plural)

/link{http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tomy-Octopals/dp/B0007D7O22\here}

Mamamoor · 10/09/2006 21:06

I did say 'baby octopus' myself but can't help feeling there is a more technical word! I like octopiddle but she thought I was making it up!

OP posts:
TooTicky · 10/09/2006 21:06

Fab picture SEA!

mears · 10/09/2006 21:06

here

Skribble · 10/09/2006 21:08

Searched all over and there seems to be no special name for a baby octopus. DH sugest octoplet but thats just because he likes the sound of it .

Saturn74 · 10/09/2006 21:09

squidlet?

Mamamoor · 10/09/2006 21:10

Thanks - Baby octopus it is then. I thought it was octopuses if plural although I think octopi sound much better!

OP posts:
Skribble · 10/09/2006 21:10

What is a group of octopuses called DH suggests a squaad of octopuses, only funny if you are Scottish .

NotQuiteCockney · 10/09/2006 21:10

Octopi isn't really the plural of octopus, you know.

NotQuiteCockney · 10/09/2006 21:11

It's "octopus", or "octopodes" if you want to get fancy with it. But "octopi" makes no sense at all.

expatinscotland · 10/09/2006 21:11

I don't know, but my mother has eaten one.

BOAK!

mears · 10/09/2006 21:13

why noy octopi - it is hippopotami?

helsi · 10/09/2006 21:14

it is just octopus I'm afraid.

NotQuiteCockney · 10/09/2006 21:14

Because the "pus" in octopus is greek for feet, and the plural of it is "podes", not "pi". "pi" is Latin, not Greek.

Piffle · 10/09/2006 21:15

from ask oxford

What are the plurals of 'octopus', 'hippopotamus', 'syllabus'?

English words of Latin or Greek origin have rather unpredictable plurals, and each one usually depends on how well established that particular word is. It may also depend on whether the Latin or Greek form of the plural is either easily recognizable or pleasant to the speaker of English.

Although it is often supposed that octopi is the 'correct' plural of octopus, and it has been in use for longer than the usual Anglicized plural octopuses, it in fact originates as an error. Octopus is not a simple Latin word of the second declension, but a Latinized form of the Greek word oktopous, and its 'correct' plural would logically be octopodes.

Other words ending in -us show a very varied pattern. Like octopi, the plural hippopotami is now generally taken to be either funny or absurdly pedantic, and the usual plural is hippopotamuses. Common usage appears to indicate a slight preference for termini rather than terminuses, but syllabuses rather than syllabi. Other usual forms include cacti and gladioli, and our files at the dictionary department show scarcely any examples of nucleuses or funguses. (Omnibi is simply a joke, and quite ungrammatical in Latin!)

Among words ending in -um it seems worth drawing attention to the word curricula, plural of curriculum, and warning against confusion with the adjective curricular (as in extra-curricular).

NotQuiteCockney · 10/09/2006 21:16

Oh, and EIS, DS1's favourite dish is "octopus at the airport", which is baby octopus marinated in a chilli and sesame sort of sauce. (Served at a dim sum restaurant near our local airport)

rustybear · 10/09/2006 21:36

Baby octopus start as eggs, then hatch into "planktonic paralarva", which look like this . They live on the surface for a while, then sink down to the bottom until they are ready to reproduce. As far as I can find out they are then just called baby octopus - and are apparently delicious.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page