Archive for Linguistics in the comics

Teenspeak, genderspeak

This is from a little while back (I've been sick — a brief account of the crisis point, back in early February, here, but the condition has continued to dog me and consumes much of my life). It's a Zits combining two of our enduring interests on Language Log, the language of adolescents and language and gender, especially the latter:

Here we see the affectionate couple (with the girl breathlessly telling the story in detail, while the guy interrupts her with an eight-word summary) enacting a gender stereotype that's often been a focus on Language Log: the talkative, emotional female versus the laconic, bare-bones male. Plus another gender stereotype, of the relationship-oriented female versus the fact-oriented male (the hell with the cuddling and all that stuff, let's get on to the important stuff, the making out).

I've been playing with the idea of assembling a gallery of Language Log cartoons (many from Zits) on gender stereotypes, and maybe another one of strips on teenspeak, along the lines of the gallery of my academic "postcard collages", most on language-related themes, linked to here.

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Vwllssnss

Following on Barbara Partee's posting on vwllssnss, here's today's Zits:

Nice conceit about dispensing with vowels in speech (as well as vowel letters in writing).

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A book written within and on the backside

This morning's Get Fuzzy featured a Bulgarian stereotype that seemed slightly, well, random:

Bucky Katt's assumption seems to be that the dress code at a Bulgarian nightclub would be ragged and strange, thus (at least partly) explaining Rob Wilco's pre-torn and pre-soiled shirt.

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Revenge, literally speaking

The latest xkcd:

Literally

(For more on non-literal literally, see here, here, and here.)

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This digitized life

Yesterday's Zits:

Then there was the whole Facebook wall rape episode, and…

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My hovercraft is full of ham

Today's Doonesbury explores the problem of over-ambitious translation:

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Indefinite descriptions

Today's Non Sequitur:

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Wow. Awkward.

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The half-life of the hashtag

Stefano Bertolo points us to Rob Cottingham's latest Noise To Signal:

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Another approach to media relations

Today's Dilbert suggests a way for engineers to deal with product planners and marketing types, which many potential sources in technical fields will recognize as a tempting strategy for dealing with the press:

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Future perfect continuous passive?

Yesterday's Dinosaur Comics explores the far reaches of verbal morphosyntax in English:

(As usual, click on the image for a larger version.)

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In your face, Reginald

The most recent PartiallyClips:

(Click on the image for a larger version.)

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-onger

Today's Get Fuzzy illustrates the perils of morphological decomposition:

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