Whelp/Welt

I’ve been wanting to write about this little annoyance for a few weeks now.  I hear it all the time and bite my tongue to keep from correcting everyone.  Many people use the word whelp when they mean welt. A whelp is a puppy or cub.  To whelp is to give birth.  I believe dog breeders still use the term whelping box.  A welt is a red mark or raised area of skin from being struck or stung.  A welt does not whelp up

These words have nothing to do with one another, except for sounding a little alike. I understand that some non-standard English is acceptable in everyday conversation, but it bothers me that many Americans, apparently, don’t know their own language well enough to realize there is a difference.  I want to scream every time I hear it! Am I a grammar Nazi? Yup.  I live with it and try not to irritate other people by correcting them.

12 responses to “Whelp/Welt”

  1. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    I Literally had a screaming fight with my fiance about whelp and welt. we wrestled and she said i left her whelps…. i said… Welts? You mean… then we got in a WHO'S RIGHT. fight…..even with the proof…..she still says whelp and wont admit she's wrong..

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  2. Carrie Minton Avatar
    Carrie Minton

    I think it's mostly here in the south. It drives me insane!!! My husband uses the word, as does his family. I think it's so ingrained in this culture that even if they're made aware of the proper word, they'll continue to say whelp. Lol

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  3. Carrie Minton Avatar
    Carrie Minton

    I should add that even my SIL who's a nurse says it! I know she didn't learn that in nursing school! Ha ha

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  4. Rosie Avatar
    Rosie

    Thanks for the replies! I'm so glad to see people are actually reading my blog! I started it mainly as a way to complain without irritating all my friends.

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  5. Pablothepoolboy Avatar
    Pablothepoolboy

    I am a pediatrician in Georgia, who grew up in the north. I constantly correct my patients and unfortunately nurses (who should know better) about this misuse of whelp. It is the biggest grammar complaint I have. Don't worry you are not alone.

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  6. Pablothepoolboy Avatar
    Pablothepoolboy

    What are your thoughts on “graduating college” . It seems to be the preferred way it is said now, but I believe that it should be graduate from college. The college graduates you, you do not graduate the college. I have discussed this with the head of an English department, and he agrees with me, but says it has become accepted use to say graduated college.

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  7. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    OK folks, I hate to be the one who rains on the whelp / welt rage, but the word “whelp,” meaning the marks on the skin (“welt”), is an old Kentucky vernacular. The “welt” meaning is included in some unabridged dictionary definitions of “whelp.” You will hear this in areas that were settled by pioneers originating in Kentucky.

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  8. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Insert “expression” after “vernacular.” Sorry for the omission.

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  9. Moe Greene Avatar
    Moe Greene

    You're not a nazi – there's another word for what you are.
    You're describing one of the reasons (and there are many) that English has been called a vulgar language. It also very beautiful in it's diversity. If you're saying a thing like this bothers you, I'd say you really don't know the history of the language at all – go study!

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  10. mmk5 Avatar
    mmk5

    My bfriend and I are arguing over welp and welt. He continues to argue the fact that it's welps on his skin that I gave him as he was laying next to me. He insists he's right…I'm wrong. Oh welp!

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  11. LHSpickygrammarian Avatar
    LHSpickygrammarian

    You are not laying next to him. You are lying next to him.

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  12. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Thank you for the clarification. I'm guilty as sin, I must admit. Commenters are likely right. I hear it constantly down here in the south. Don't be ashamed of being a grammar Nazi. You are needed until everyone understands the difference between there, their, and they're.(my biggest grammar pet peeve)

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