Whom lives
In the latest Tom The Dancing Bug:
All you whomophiles who were outraged by last month's casual reference to the death of whom, your day joke has come!
In the latest Tom The Dancing Bug:
All you whomophiles who were outraged by last month's casual reference to the death of whom, your day joke has come!
Today's SMBC imagines the invention of an implantable grammar corrector, the whom-o-matic tooth:
Read the rest of this entry »
Many parents are oblivious to the nuances of their children's paralinguistic vocalizations. But not Aubrey Chorde, from the most recent Something Positive, who is interpreting here for her friend and house-guest Davan MacIntyre.
Some pre-verbal sound-meaning correspondences are universal — crying and laughing, for example. Some more subtle differences, like empty-stomach crying and full-diaper crying, are (I think) interpretable to some extent across children. But just like adults, very young children also develop idiosyncratic cries, laughs, grunts, giggles, and so on. And their lack of self-censorship makes these especially useful sources of information about their internal lives (and external but out-of-sight activities).
Read the rest of this entry »
The latest Subnormality includes this panel:
Read the rest of this entry »
Saturday's Dilbert:
Digital media offer wonderful opportunities for the study of language, communication, and culture. So despite short-term problems, both internal and external, I'm optimistic.
From Ben Zimmer, who got it from Mike Klaas, who found it on the Wonder-Tonic site ("Written, Graphical, and Interactive Sundries by Mike Lacher") of 3/31/10, here:
Read the rest of this entry »
Permalink Comments off
Following on the Dinosaur Comics eggcorn cartoon in my last posting, here's Micah Gordon's Coarse Ground on (roughly) the same subject:
Read the rest of this entry »
Permalink Comments off
From Ryan North yesterday:
with an explanation, and a plug for LLog:
WHAT ARE THE HAPS MY FRIENDS
November 17th, 2010: This comic and all the eggcorns in it come from the wonderful Language Log and the eggcorn database.
Read the rest of this entry »
Permalink Comments off