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February 16, 2024 @ 1:39 pm
· Filed under Language and the media
The recent flurry about "TikTalk" seems to have started with Rochelle Barrand, "TikTok: 'Influencer speak' on social media platforms is likely to be the future of the English accent – expert", NationalWorld 11/22/2023: A language expert said a "TikTok voice" which is often used by influencers on social media platforms is likely to be "the […]
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November 3, 2023 @ 3:49 pm
· Filed under Accents, Language and society, Pronunciation, Uncategorized
King’s English and Cockney replaced by three new accents, study finds Britons depart from overtly class-based post-war speech epitomised by either clipped vowels or working-class dialects By Charles Hymas, The Telegraph, Home Affairs Editor 30 October 2023 • 6:33pm I vaguely recall an earlier study from about ten years ago that came to similar conclusions (including the emergence of […]
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April 30, 2022 @ 3:00 pm
· Filed under Language and culture, Language and music
Article by Clara Cini in Le Monde (4/27/22): « C’est carré comme en Corée », de la fascination des rappeurs pour la dictature au tic langagier "It's square like in Korea", from the fascination of rappers for the dictatorship to the language tic [The above French to English translation is from Google Translate. Since the […]
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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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January 23, 2019 @ 6:23 am
· Filed under Words words words
Today's xkcd: Mouseover title: "I [suspect] that we are throwing more and more of our resources, including the cream of our youth, into financial activities remote from the production of goods and services, into activities that generate high private rewards disproportionate to their social productivity. I suspect that the immense power of the computer is […]
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June 23, 2017 @ 11:24 am
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
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February 16, 2017 @ 6:29 am
· Filed under Language and politics, Phonetics and phonology, Psychology of language
During the 2016 presidential campaign, there was a lot of negative commentary about Hillary Clinton's voice. Some examples from across the political spectrum are compiled and discussed here, and even-the-liberal-The-Atlantic published on "The Science Behind Hating Hillary's Voice". Since Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump pretty much got a pass for vocal characteristics analogous to Hillary's, it was […]
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August 12, 2016 @ 7:10 am
· Filed under Prosody
In the context of the current political season, I've started taking a look at rhetorical styles, including the aspects of rhythm, pitch, and voice quality for which linguists generally use the cover term "prosody". Our enormously over-long list of topic categories didn't include "prosody", so I've added it — and in the process of labeling […]
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May 1, 2016 @ 10:40 am
· Filed under Peeving
Molly Worthen, "Stop Saying 'I Feel Like'", NYT 4/30/2016: In American politics, few forces are more powerful than a voter’s vague intuition. “I support Donald Trump because I feel like he is a doer,” a senior at the University of South Carolina told Cosmopolitan. “Personally, I feel like Bernie Sanders is too idealistic,” a Yale student […]
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November 25, 2015 @ 8:43 am
· Filed under Prosody, Sociolinguistics
The internet has been working hard at providing Deborah Cameron with material for a book she might write on attitudes towards women's voices. (Background: "Un justified", 7/8/2015; "Cameron v. Wolf" 7/27/2015.) To see what I mean, sample the tweets for #JeopardyLaura, or read some of the old-media coverage, like "Is this woman the most annoying 'Jeopardy!' contestant ever?", Fox News […]
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November 15, 2015 @ 6:29 pm
· Filed under Language and politics
In the comments on yesterday's post, the question arose about how the Arabic-based acronym "Daesh" (from al-Dawla al-Islamiya fi al-Iraq wa al-Sham, "the islamic state of Iraq and the Levant", maybe better rendered as "Da’ish") would be pronounced in English. We now know what Barack Obama's choice is — [dæʃ], as in "dash": Turkey's been a […]
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August 20, 2015 @ 5:48 am
· Filed under Sociolinguistics
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, "LOL Vocal Fry Rules U R All Dumb", Jezebel 7/30/2015: This week, in shit-hot stuff happening on the internet, once-great feminist pundit Naomi Wolf wrote a column about how vocal fry is Keeping Women Down, and then other women across the internet rebutted her, rightly positing that when your dads bitch about […]
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July 10, 2015 @ 12:11 am
· Filed under Politics of language, Sociolinguistics
Sameer ud Dowla Khan, a phonetician at Reed College, has written an open letter to Terry Gross, which starts like this: While I am a loyal fan of your program, I’m very disappointed in your interview of David Thorpe and Susan Sankin from 7 July 2015. As both a phonetician who specializes in intonation, stress patterns, and […]
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