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March 19, 2019 @ 8:01 pm
· Filed under Awesomeness, Dictionaries
The latest batch of updates to the online edition of the Oxford English Dictionary includes a term that originated right here on Language Log, in a 2005 post by Arnold Zwicky. The term is frequency illusion, first attested in Arnold's classic post, "Just Between Dr. Language and I." Here is the OED treatment, an addition to […]
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September 18, 2008 @ 6:02 pm
· Filed under Books, Changing times, Language and technology
In my capacity as executive producer of the Visual Thesaurus, I recently had the opportunity to interview David Crystal about his new book, Txtng: The Gr8 Db8, a careful demolition of the myths surrounding text messaging. You can read the first part of my interview on the Visual Thesaurus website here, with parts two and […]
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August 9, 2008 @ 2:51 pm
· Filed under Prescriptivist poppycock, Semantics, Syntax
Language Log reader Jukka Kohonen has written to me about the Recency Illusion, the (often inaccurate) belief that a usage you have recently noticed is in fact a recent development in the language. Kohonen wondered whether anyone had studied its causes (and effects) systematically, and he had a specific instance in mind. I had to […]
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December 2, 2020 @ 8:02 am
· Filed under Words words words
S.H. writes: Maybe I'm suffering from a recency illusion, but I feel that "zero" has begun to replace "no". I see this often in Washington Post political columns, and here's an example from Robert Reich: Of course, these claims haven’t held up in court because there’s zero evidence. Checking Google Books ngrams suggests that "zero evidence" is indeed […]
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October 13, 2019 @ 9:36 pm
· Filed under Awesomeness, Dictionaries, singular "they"
Back in September 2010, I reported that the Oxford English Dictionary had added an entry for eggcorn, a term that was coined right here on Language Log for an alteration of a word or phrase that makes sense in a new way (like acorn being changed to eggcorn). The earliest citation given for that meaning of eggcorn […]
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May 23, 2018 @ 2:51 pm
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
The "Frequency Illusion", introduced here in 2005, has made the big time in today's SMBC:
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March 24, 2018 @ 6:51 am
· Filed under Peeving
What follows is a guest post by Bob Ladd. When I lived in Germany in the early 1980s, I bought a few style guides in the hope of improving my written German. One of them turned out to consist primarily of what I would now (as a long-time Language Log reader) recognize as ‘peeving’ – […]
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April 23, 2017 @ 3:32 am
· Filed under Animal behavior, Silliness, singular "they", Syntax, Taboo vocabulary
I think Mark Liberman may have been concerned that perhaps my post "Pronominal reference to the arbitrary dog" hinted at being tempted toward the Recency Illusion. Not true, of course: even when surprised by some point of usage that I notice, I never conclude I must therefore be the first to have encountered it. On […]
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March 21, 2017 @ 9:18 am
· Filed under Variation
Below is an email from Eoin Ryan (with added audio): Last week on Language Log you posted about a "tentative would" as used by Mike Pence, which reminded me of a use of "would" which I find interesting and may be similar, but I think it is different. Also, last week I had no clear examples […]
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September 27, 2016 @ 8:55 am
· Filed under Language and politics
As Geoff Pullum noted, in last night's presidential debate, many of Trump's interruptions of Clinton (or shall we say his "manterruptions") involved on-the-fly denials of what Clinton was saying. Geoff describes one such denial: "'Not!' he snapped at one point, like a 9-year-old, during one of her utterances." Let's go to the transcript: CLINTON: Well, […]
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January 11, 2014 @ 8:32 am
· Filed under Words words words
It's common to nominalize already-lexicalized combinations of a verb and an intransitive preposition, like push-up, push-over, hand-out, walk-on, walk-out, and so on. It's less common to see nominalization of a semantically-transparent verb and transitive preposition, but a new one has recently (?) arisen in the halls of Congress. Thus George Nelson, "Brown Touts Benefits Extension, […]
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December 18, 2012 @ 5:37 am
· Filed under Changing times, Variation
Anthony Gardner, "Absurd Persons Plural", The Economist 12/12/2012: Earlier this month I went to a lecture by the American novelist Richard Ford. Called "Why novels are smart", it was brilliant and thought-provoking. But my thoughts were also provoked by the British academic who introduced him, commending—among other things—his "prose styles". Now, Richard Ford is without […]
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June 20, 2011 @ 9:11 am
· Filed under Peeving
Reader SG wrote in to express a concern about how we should fill in the blank: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain _________ Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
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