Archive for Linguistics in the comics

Another reason to study grammar?

Today's Cathy:

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Scuba dove?

From the annals of (two-part) back-formed verbs and irregularization, a Sheldon cartoon:

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In a good way

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The dynamics of lexical competition in spoken word recognition

Today's Cathy addresses the topic of ambiguity resolution in speech:

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Melancholy

In today's Get Fuzzy, Bucky's exploration of English compound-noun semantics continues:

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No concept of X in Y

We last saw a Zippy with this trope in it ("we have no concept of war or private property") back in January. Here it comes again:

(For an inventory of other Language Log postings on "no word for X" and related figures, look here.)

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Private meanings

Bizarro takes on a species of semantic error:

From my 1980 booklet Mistakes (p. 14):

Corresponding to the semantic errors above are PRIVATE MEANINGS … I have one friend who thought for a long time that Indo- meant 'southern, lower' (from its occurrence in Indochina) and another who believed that ritzy meant 'in poor taste' (as a result of her parents' deprecating tone in using the word).

My two examples illustrate two routes to private meanings: a misapprehension about the meanings contributed by parts of a word (Indochina); and a misapprehension of a word's meaning based on its use in context (ritzy). Just yesterday I posted on my blog about another instance of the first sort: spendthrift used, in a Cathy cartoon, for 'penurious person', no doubt because of a connection of the element thrift to the adjective thrifty.

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Compound semantics

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Middle English dinosaurs

For St. Patrick's Day, Dinosaur Comics muses on Middle English (among other things):

(Hat tip to Bruce Webster.)

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Metaphorical dinosaurs

From Dinosaur Comics, DIRECTION IS A BUCKET THAT PEOPLE KEEP SNEAKING INTO (with no apologies to George Lakoff):

(Hat tip to Bruce Webster.)

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A business opportunity

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Contextual interpretation of prosody

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I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't

David Craig sent in a link to yesterday's Blondie, a strip that I don't normally read. He may have uncovered the secret identity of Geoff Pullum's correspondent — but in any case, the last panel has a nice instance of overnegation, of a kind that I don't think we've discussed before:

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