Search Results
September 2, 2021 @ 8:19 pm
· Filed under Intonation, Mannerisms, Peeving, Speech-acts, Variation
[This is a guest post by Pamela Kyle Crossley] Just read the blog post on this. I feel like "I feel like" is one of those passive-aggressive tics that came in in the 1980/1990s, related to that thing where people turned statements into questions by raising their pitch at the end of a sentence (which […]
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April 11, 2021 @ 12:21 pm
· Filed under Grammar
From John Brewer: Not sure if Language Log typically has a "travel page" section, but those readers in or near the NYC area who are vaccinated or otherwise not locked down might be interested in an exhibit at the Grolier Club in Manhattan that I visited a few days ago and will remain there until […]
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July 1, 2020 @ 2:49 pm
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
Today's SMBC: Mouseover text: "I actually only made this so nobody will ever invite me to a party again."
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November 2, 2019 @ 8:29 am
· Filed under Psychology of language
Below is a guest post from Kavita Pillay, co-host of the new Subtitle podcast. Do you hate a seemingly normal word for reasons that you can't quite pinpoint? Or, are there words that you love to say out loud? If so, the Subtitle podcast (more on us below) wants to hear from you! On Nov. […]
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September 22, 2019 @ 7:23 am
· Filed under Usage
"Singular 'they': Though singular 'they' is old, 'they' as a nonbinary proonoun is new — and useful", Merriam-Webster Words We're Watching: Much has been written on they, and we aren’t going to attempt to cover it here. We will note that they has been in consistent use as a singular pronoun since the late 1300s; that the development of […]
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July 12, 2019 @ 5:44 am
· Filed under Changing times, Language and gender
Farhad Manjoo, "Call Me 'They'", NYT 7/10/2019: The singular “they” is inclusive and flexible, and it breaks the stifling prison of gender expectations. Let’s all use it. I am your stereotypical, cisgender, middle-aged suburban dad. I dabble in woodworking, I take out the garbage, and I covet my neighbor’s Porsche. Though I do think men […]
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December 15, 2018 @ 11:02 am
· Filed under Language and economics, Language and science, Language change, Prescriptivism and descriptivism
Thought-provoking article by Lane Greene, the language columnist and an editor at The Economist: "Who decides what words mean: Bound by rules, yet constantly changing, language might be the ultimate self-regulating system, with nobody in charge", Aeon (12/6/18). Greene starts with a wallop: Decades before the rise of social media, polarisation plagued discussions about language. […]
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August 13, 2018 @ 7:31 am
· Filed under Language and the media, Lexicon and lexicography
Rachel Paige King ("The Draconian Dictionary Is Back", The Atlantic 8/5/2018) suggests that lexicographers might be (re)turning to prescriptivism: Since the 1960s, the reference book has cataloged how people actually use language, not how they should. That might be changing. […] The standard way of describing these two approaches in lexicography is to call them […]
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April 11, 2018 @ 9:15 pm
· Filed under Dialects, Dictionaries, Language and society, Language attitudes, Language teaching and learning, Prescriptivist non-poppycock, Standard language, Usage
One of the most well-known pieces of lexicographic history is the controversy that greeted the publication of Webster’s Third New International Dictionary. Whereas the predecessor of W3, Webster’s Second New etc., had been regarded as authoritatively prescriptive, W3 was condemned in the popular media for its descriptive approach, the widespread perception of which can be […]
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December 6, 2017 @ 12:12 pm
· Filed under Politics of language, singular "they", This blogging life
My most recent post started out as a very minor note of approval about the continuing spread of singular they in journalism. Then the person who sent me the quote realized that Phillip Garcia, named in the cited newspaper story, had a preference for being referred to with the pronoun they, which nullified the point. […]
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April 26, 2017 @ 11:02 am
· Filed under Dialects, Language and education, Reading
In a recent article Patriann Smith, a professor of Language, Diversity and Literacy Studies at Texas Tech, makes a bold proposal: that “nonstandard Englishes” such as African American English (AAE) and Hawai’i Creole English be used as the primary language of instruction in educating children who speak them. ("A Distinctly American Opportunity: Exploring Non-Standardized English(es) […]
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February 8, 2017 @ 10:28 am
· Filed under Language and gender, Politics of language, Prescriptivist poppycock, Semantics, singular "they"
The Times Literary Supplement diarist who hides behind the initials "J.C." makes this catty remark (issue of January 6, 2017, page 36) about Sidney E. Berger's The Dictionary of the Book: A Glossary of Book Collectors: "Predictions were that the Internet would do away with dealers' catalogs and it is true that many a dealer […]
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November 13, 2016 @ 7:10 am
· Filed under Morphology
From Jenny Chu, on November 9: I am a long-time follower of Language Log but usually comment on the Chinese and Vietnamese related topics by Prof. Mair. Yet I thought you might be amused by the attached conversation. It shows some nice examples of the playfulness and creativity of the human language faculty, as well […]
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