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August 19, 2020 @ 1:42 pm
· Filed under Historical linguistics, Language and archeology, Language and genetics, Language and history
The late 13th and 14th c. portraits of the Mongol khans and their wives often show them with rather light (hazel or greenish) eyes. For example, the 14th c. portrait of Ögedei Khan (1186-1241) clearly depicts him as having greenish blue eyes and a reddish (definitely light colored) mustache and beard. (National Palace Museum)
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August 19, 2020 @ 9:44 am
· Filed under Headlinese
Or is it five nouns, a verb, and two more nouns? "Napa wildfire LNU Lightning Complex Gamble Hennessey Fire – August 2020", SFGate 8/18/2020. "Napa" is the county; "wildfire" is obvious; "LNU" turns out to stand for "Lake-Napa-Unit" but the initialism is obviously a thing even if we don't know what it means; "Lightning" is […]
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August 17, 2020 @ 5:05 pm
· Filed under Lexicon and lexicography, Neologisms
[This is a guest post by Nathan Hopson] One of the first bits of Nagoya-specific Japanese I picked up was 来名 (raimei), i.e. "come to Nagoya." It added a bit of local color to my lexicon of directional Japanese, which was mostly commonplace but remarkable locutions such as 上京 (jōkyō, go "up" to Tokyo), which […]
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August 16, 2020 @ 2:09 pm
· Filed under Humor, Phonetics and phonology
It's not just flapping and voicing of /t/ in words like litter (= "lidder") or pretty (= "priddy"), and word sequences like fat Albert (= "fad Albert"). American speakers tend to weaken all consonants and even consonant clusters in similar environments. So if you take today's ubiquitous "mask debate" news, and add the perceptual biases […]
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August 16, 2020 @ 9:15 am
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
Today's xkcd: Mouseover title: "I'm like a vampire, except I'm not crossing that threshold even if you invite me."
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August 16, 2020 @ 7:52 am
· Filed under Dialects, Language and culture, Language and food, Multilingualism, Slogans
Yesterday morning I ate breakfast at a Cracker Barrel in Canton, Ohio and in mid-afternoon I had an early dinner at a Dutch Pantry off Route 80 in Pennsylvania. When the waitress gave me the bill, I noticed that she had written "Be Dank mich!" on the back of it. There was also what looked […]
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August 15, 2020 @ 7:33 am
· Filed under Morphology
Or maybe that should be paraparasynthetic. Charles Belov writes: From "San Francisco’s Lazy Bear rose out of a recession. Can it survive coronavirus?" by Janelle Bitker: "But now, the chefs serve takeout cold-brew coffee, pastries and sandwiches — like hot Wagyu pastrami on sourdough — that they hope taste worthy of a two Michelin-starred restaurant." […]
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August 14, 2020 @ 6:31 am
· Filed under Ambiguity, Crash blossoms, Language and the law
Ambiguous headline: "Chinese Citizen Files New Lawsuit Against Authorities Seeking COVID-19 Damages", by Frank Fang (August 13, 2020 Updated: August 13, 2020)
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August 13, 2020 @ 6:52 am
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
The first two panels of today's SMBC:
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August 13, 2020 @ 5:03 am
· Filed under Grammar, Language and advertising, Rhetoric
Tweet by Thomas Packard: "There is no best but better". That's deep, Apple. This is OEM @Apple , right? Gotta be. pic.twitter.com/pBu2Jzl0ll — Thomas Packard (@sciencethomas) September 9, 2017
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August 11, 2020 @ 4:08 pm
· Filed under Obituaries
Geoffrey Nunberg died earlier today after a long illness. You can sample his writing via his Google Scholar page, all the way back to his 1977 PhD thesis The Pragmatics of Reference. You can read or listen to a sample of his Fresh Air pieces; check out the links on his old Berkeley web page; delve […]
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August 11, 2020 @ 4:02 pm
· Filed under Etymology, Historical linguistics, Language and history, Reconstructions, Titles
From Pamela Crossley: Just read again Chao Wu’s perplexing post on An early fourth century AD historical puzzle involving a Caucasian people in North China. it mentions “pugu” as “a Hu title.” This made me wonder about possible connection of “pugu” (however it was originally pronounced) and related series of titles boga / bojilie / beyile, […]
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August 11, 2020 @ 8:50 am
· Filed under Rhetoric
Lawrence Downes, "How to turn Sean Hannity into food for worms", WaPo 8/6/2020: I didn’t set out to compost Sean Hannity. It was something I settled on after considering several other options and rejecting them one by one. The first was leaving him in the basement indefinitely. That worked for a while. I could almost […]
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