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Language Headlines (minicast) - 3 Nov. 2008

Published on Nov 02, 2008 in none

Listing 1-21 of 21 episodes

English Down Under - 5 Jan. 2009

English Down Under - 5 Jan. 2009

January 04, 2009

Automobile Words of the Year - 29 Dec. 2008

Automobile Words of the Year - 2...

December 28, 2008

Coinkydinks and Big Boxes - 29 Dec. 2008

Coinkydinks and Big Boxes - 29 D...

December 28, 2008

Ground Game (minicast) - 1 Dec. 2008

Ground Game (minicast) - 1 Dec. ...

November 30, 2008

Moonbats and Wingnuts - 1 Dec. 2008

Moonbats and Wingnuts - 1 Dec. 2008

November 30, 2008

Dust Bunnies and Ghost Turds - 23 Nov. 2008

Dust Bunnies and Ghost Turds - 2...

November 23, 2008

Nuke the Fridge - 23 Nov. 2008

Nuke the Fridge - 23 Nov. 2008

November 23, 2008

A Year of Words - 17 Nov. 2008

A Year of Words - 17 Nov. 2008

November 16, 2008

Of Gossamer and Geese (minicast) - 10 Nov. 2008

Of Gossamer and Geese (minicast)...

November 09, 2008

Pwned Prose, Stat! - 10 Nov. 2008

Pwned Prose, Stat! - 10 Nov. 2008

November 09, 2008

Language Headlines (minicast) - 3 Nov. 2008

Language Headlines (minicast) - ...

November 02, 2008

Hair of the Politics that Bit You - 3 Nov. 2008

Hair of the Politics that Bit Yo...

November 02, 2008

Riddled Through With Riddles - 27 Oct. 2008

Riddled Through With Riddles - 2...

October 26, 2008

Language Headlines (minicast) - 6 Oct. 2008

Language Headlines (minicast) - ...

October 05, 2008

Never Bolt Your Door with A Boiled Carrot - 6 Oct. 2008

Never Bolt Your Door with A Boil...

October 05, 2008

Regional Food Names: When Is a Milkshake Not a Milkshake? Minicast - 29 Sept. 2008

Regional Food Names: When Is a M...

September 28, 2008

The Txting Db8 - 29 Sept. 2008

The Txting Db8 - 29 Sept. 2008

September 28, 2008

Pwned Prose, Stat! - 15 Sept. 2008

Pwned Prose, Stat! - 15 Sept. 2008

September 14, 2008

Australian Slang

Australian Slang

April 03, 2006

Etymology

Etymology

March 27, 2006

Latin

Latin

March 20, 2006

 

Last year British slang lexicographer Jonathon Green struck a deal with the publisher Chambers Harrap to create an exhaustive dictionary of English... More

Last year British slang lexicographer Jonathon Green struck a deal with the publisher Chambers Harrap to create an exhaustive dictionary of English slang. Now, says the London Telegraph, the first fruit of that relationship has appeared in the form of the Chambers Slang Dictionary. The main sources of slang, Green says, have remained the same: sex and sexual organs, drinking, and terms of abuse. But ,there are always innovations. The Telegraph offers some of them: boilerhouse, modern British rhyming slang for spouse. Jawsing, US teen slang for lying. And, muzzy, an Irish word for a naughty child. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2008/10/27/sv_slangmain.xml http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2008/10/27/sv_slang.xml In the Paper Cuts blog of the New York Times, Jennifer Scheussler reviews 'On The Dot,' by Nicholas and Alexander Humez. It's an exhaustive look at the period or the dot, that little piece of punctuation that does so much. And I do mean exhaustive. The book is so digressive and sometimes so far afield of its subject matter that you might find yourself flipping to the front to make sure you're still reading the same book. http://papercuts.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/10/27/dot-everything/ In the discussion forum on that page, I discovered the 'fini.' This is a new piece of punctuation created by Dave Rosenthal, an assistant managing editor at the Baltimore Sun. The fini is a square instead of a circle. Dave says, 'A period is usually a fine way to end a sentence. But when there's a forcefulness attached to the words, I worry that the period will roll away. It is, after all, just a tiny black ball.' http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/books/blog/2008/07/the_endofdiscussion.html Do you want to find out what Virginia Woolf and John Steinbeck sounded like? They're part of an audio collection from the British Library, called 'The Spoken Word: British Writers.' It was discussed and played on NPR's All Things Considered. The audio is a rare find, as many recordings of the early days of radio were never saved. Recordings by George Orwell, for example, have yet to be found, even though he worked for the British Broadcasting Corporation. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=96030704 -- Get your language question answered on the air! Call or write 24 hours a day: (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673, words@waywordradio.org, or visit our web site and discussion forums at http://waywordradio.org. Copyright 2008, Wayword LLC. Less

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