Nathan's Notebook
|
|
|
---by
Nathan Bierma
Column:
Blogs:
Book: Friends:
Strands:
|
NBierma.com > Notebook
from Twitter
| Follow me!
Thursday, December 23, 2004
This week in my B&C blog: Rising to the defense of Babar the Elephant. Plus: Brazil being overrun by "motoboys"; the definition of "intuitive ethics"; Western natalists and their many babies; one former fashion model's crusade against shallow ideals of beauty, and more ... LINK/ARCHIVE My latest Tribune language column: The Top 10 Books on Language of 2004. temp link/perm.preview Inflections • Here's an example of how trying to avoid splitting an auxiliary from its verb ("will be tainted") sounds really weird. (And what's up with "apparently" in an objective news story?) "Barry Bonds' legendary career apparently forever will be tainted." Other questions that come up when you read the papers: Can renew be intransitive? "Fighting renews in Fallujah" x Why the sentence fragments? (Um, I mean, Why are there sentence fragments?) Danger and drama as Prime Minister sweeps into Iraq x • Among the church signs spotted at www.churchsigngenerator.com: "Forbidden fruits create many jams" • In- is Latin; un- is Old English--I think, after looking it up in AHD. • Just about done with your last-minute Christmas cattle raid? From AHD's WHM: spree • Geoff Pullum puts this sentence under a magnifying glass at LL: "We are world champions at lawmaking," Christine Ockrent, who has anchored the evening news on two channels, run the weekly L'Express, and, as she says, "seen everything," told me a few days after the law was signed. Sez he: That's a preposed direct quote ("We are world champions at lawmaking") followed by the rest of a clause headed by the verb tell (Christine Ockrent told me ___). The clause has an additional adjunct at the end a~few days after the law was signed): a preposition phrase headed by after, containing a pre-head measure adjunct noun phrase (a~few days) ... • I kid you not: a video and study kit called "Sex as God's Gift" in a Christian catalog offers "Reproducible student worksheets." • I saw an ad for a product and an "accessory." I thought that was what Bill Walsh in Elephants of Style calls a "false singular"--he cites "school supply." But the dictionaries have this as a true singular, in part because of the word's definition as accomplice to a crime. • Invented adverbs in my inbox recently: "I'll peruse them more in depthly when I get back." "Thanks muchly." One of these writers apologized to me for the unorthodox construction. No need--I'm a descriptivist! If you're communicating the meaning you intend, who cares if it conforms to your stuffy English teacher's liking? • "Justice oughta be fair." George W. Bush at recent economic summit. I don't disagree. • From Erin McKean's MWWW: Sabaism [SAY-bay-iz-um] the worship and adoration of the stars. From a Hebrew word meaning 'host'. • From Richard Wilbur's "Some Words Inside of Words" earlier this year in the Atlantic: At heart, ambassadors are always sad. • Previous column and inflections • Etymology Today from M-W: precatory\PREK-uh-tor-ee\ : expressing a wish Example sentence: We here convey our wishes In this precatory phrase: May peace and joy be with you In all the coming days! [So do I! - NB] Nowadays, you're most likely to see "precatory" used in legal contexts to distinguish statements that merely express a wish from those that create a legal obligation. For example, if you add a provision to your will asking someone to take care of your pet if you die, that provision is merely precatory. Outside of jurisprudence, you might see references to such things as "precatory dress codes" or "precatory stockholder proposals" — all of which are non-binding. "Precatory" traces to Latin "precari" ("to pray"), and it has always referred to something in the nature of an entreaty or supplication. For example, a precatory hymn is one that beseeches "from sin and sorrow set us free" — versus a laudatory hymn (that is, one giving praise). • Previous E.T. ![]() The Sage Gateshead, a £70m performing arts centre on the banks of the Tyne, opened [recently]. Its three music venues are shrouded by a vast and billowing steel-and-glass roof that resembles either a bank of low-lying cumulus clouds hugging the river, or the gun-blisters of a second world war RAF bomber. Guardian
Snapshots show a weighted Ping-Pong ball sinking into dry quicksand. The 4.7-ounce ball disappears in about one-tenth of a second and then expels a narrow jet of sand. ... Traditional deathtrap quicksand is a slurry of sand, water and clay. ... Now Dr. Lohse, a professor of applied physics, and his colleagues at the University of Twente in the Netherlands show that it is possible to vanish into a pile of completely dry sand as well. NY Times
Wednesday, December 15, 2004
This week in my B&C blog: Part five in a series on the brain and consciousness: deja vu, neurotheology, the neuroscience of architecture, the problem with lie detectors, and more ... LINK/ARCHIVE More on consciousness. The Economist on supercharging the brain; Sci.American on music and the brain. My first Sightings language column: On the problem with the word "solutions" in contemporary Christianity. http://marty-center.uchicago.edu/sightings/archive_2004/1209.shtml Here's M-W on indissoluble: indissoluble \in-dih-SAHL-yuh-bul\ adjective My latest Tribune language column: On the coming obsolescence of the word "merry" and the greeting "Merry Christmas." temp link/perm.preview I was going to start the story with this clip from Seinfeld (spotted 10/28 at 6:30 CT): J: Who would go anywhere with Newman? G: Well, he's merry. J: He is merry. Here's a story about a bizarre campaign to save "Merry Christmas." I wanted going to note that the word has had a lot of spellings, especially between Chaucer and Shakespeare: “myrie,” “murie,” “mery,” and “merrie.” But that's true of most English words that old. Here's an excerpt from the OED. Inflections • "Hanukkah (also spelled Hanukka, Chanukah, Chanukkah), is from Hebrew and means 'consecration, dedication.'" more • From AHD's Word Histories and Mysteries:
• • Previous column and inflections • Etymology Today from M-W: verbose\ver-BOHSS\ 1 : containing more words than necessary : wordy; also : impaired by wordiness 2 : given to wordiness There's no shortage of words to describe wordiness in English. "Diffuse," "long-winded," "prolix," "redundant," "windy," "repetitive," "loose," "rambling," "digressive," and "circumlocutory" are some that come to mind. Want to express the opposite idea? Try "succinct," "concise," "brief," "short," "summary," "terse," "precise," "compact," "lean," "tight," or "compendious." "Verbose," which falls solidly into the first camp of words, comes from Latin "verbosus," from "verbum," meaning "word." Other descendants of "verbum" include "verb," "adverb," "proverb," "verbal," "verbatim," and "verbicide" (that's the deliberate distortion of the sense of a word). • Previous E.T. How Andy Rooney would sign on as CBS anchor (according to him): "Good evening. I'm Andy Rooney -- and don't you forget it. Tonight, news about the end of the world, but first, several commercials for some of the disgusting things that are probably wrong with you. You may want the children to leave the room." Family Secret Turns Out To Be Boring x Lawyers Separate Mary-Kate & Ashley Olsen In 17-Hour Procedure x Sports-Related Murder Provides Perfect Local-News Segue x PHOENIX-The arrest of former Arizona State running back Darius Cantrell in connection with a homicide provided the perfect segue from local news to the sports report on KPHO CBS 5's News At Ten Monday. "Cantrell, who is charged with stabbing his ex-girlfriend 38 times, is being held without bail," anchor Diana Sullivan said. "Speaking of sports, can the Cardinals' coach bail the team out of a third-place finish in the NFC West? Our own Gary Cruz will have the verdict after the break." Risk Champ Flunks Geography Test x ALBANY, NY-Alfred Wu, the 13-year-old winner of the 2004 East Coast Risk Championship, flunked his 8th-grade world-geography test, social-studies teacher Jane Laurent reported Monday. "His test paper was filled with names like Kamchatka and Yakutsk, and the Ukraine spread over half of Europe," Laurent said. "And, by his account, the U.S. is made up of only three states: Eastern United States, Western United States, and Alaska." Last week, Wu received an "F" on a paper he wrote about Napoleonic military Stratego. Op-ed: Desperate Times Call For Desperate Housewives x Wednesday, December 08, 2004
This week in my B&C blog: Part two on panhandling. Plus: Why Christians don't care about the Fourth Commandment; the moral messages of public school textbooks; when plagiarism isn't so bad; and more ... LINK/ARCHIVE Here's the picture for my Places item this week on Mormons in Hawaii. My latest Tribune language columns: • On the state of sentence diagramming. temp link/perm.preview • On the real origins of Chicago's nickname "the Windy City." temp link/perm.preview I've posted additional links and information on the history of "Windy City" here. I wanted to do a whole piece on "Word Myths" and so-called folk etymologies (or "mythetymologies," as they are called in the second item below), but "Windy City" called for special attention. Here are two relevant clips; the first from an etymology site, the second from Language Log: - die is cast Inflections • I'd heard the song several times before (67 times alone on NBC's coverage of the Olympics), but it didn't hit me until I was watching Josh Groban's LA concert on PBS Sunday: He sings, "You raise me up to more than I can be." Isn't that impossible? (I know that "more than I had previously been" is not as lyrical, but still ... ) • "She said she would go [fly to St. Louis] later in the day," my wife reported. "What day?" I asked. She meant, "she said later in the day that she would go next week." • From my church newsletter: "The room opened up the day I was talking to the social worker about moving her because of her verbally abusive roommate. So we were able to advocate for her priority." I've been hearing this a lot lately. The verb "advocate" is transitive (M-W: "to plead in favor of"), but the problem is that the noun can be used this way: "I was an advocate for her priority." (For that matter, I'm not sure about "for her priority" as opposed to "to make her a priority." But I am glad the room switch worked out!) • LL on thesaurusizing quote attributions. "We caught them on the wrong day," Reese understated. (Reminds me of the classic line: "Shut up," he explained. • From AHD: taboo • P.J. O'Rourke's boilerplate post-election editorial in the Atlantic. It's hilarious, but deceptive in appearing easy to write. You have to think through what the cliches would be and then strike the right words (I'm assuming). The people have spoken, choosing to [blank] the course of American [blank]. We see from the [blank] size of the electoral margin that the people have spoken [blank]ively. It is up to you, [blank] [blank], to navigate these [blank] but [blank] waters with [blank]fullness. Remember, the voters, though often [blank]istic and sometimes [blank]ious, are ever un-[blank] in their [blank]ism. • Previous column and inflections • Etymology Today from M-W: uncouth\un-KOOTH\ 1 : strange or clumsy in shape or appearance : outlandish 2 : lacking in polish and grace : rugged 3 : awkward and uncultivated in appearance, manner, or behavior : rude "Uncouth" comes from the Old English "unc?th," which joins the prefix "un-" with "c?th," meaning "familiar, known." How did a word that meant "unfamiliar" come to mean "outlandish," "rugged," or "rude"? Some examples from literature illustrate that the transition happened quite naturally. In Captain Singleton, Daniel Defoe refers to "a strange noise more uncouth than any they had ever heard." In William Shakespeare's As You Like It, Orlando tells Adam, "If this uncouth forest yield anything savage, I will either be food for it or bring it for food to thee." In Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Ichabod Crane fears "to look over his shoulder, lest he should behold some uncouth being tramping close behind him!" So, that which is unfamiliar is often perceived as strange, wild, or unpleasant. Meanings such as "outlandish," "rugged," or "rude" naturally follow.
World's Scientists Admit They Just Don't Like Mice x Wal-Mart Announces Massive Rollback On Employee Wages x Op-ed: What This Town Needs Is A Child In A Well x Wednesday, December 01, 2004
This week in my B&C blog: November news and book review roundup. LINK/ARCHIVE My latest B&C Corner: A report from the National Communication Association convention here in Chicago. http://www.christianitytoday.com/books/features/weblog/041129.html My latest Tribune language column has been postponed to accommodate an illustration; it's actually a longer feature on the controversial history of the name "Windy City." It should run either Friday or next Tuesday; stay tuned.
[The blog was looking a little blah, so I put up this pic as a way to say Happy December! more pics/animation] Meanwhile, here's a brief I submitted, that didn't run, on haymaker: Several reports of last week's Pacers-Pistons brawl made the participating pugilists sound like farmers, describing the punches exchanged by players and fans as "haymakers." Over half the results for "haymaker" on a Lexis-Nexis search of the past week refer either to the melee in Detroit or the South Carolina-Clemson football brawl the next day. [Sources note that the Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang has "haymaker" in the sense of "a hard swinging blow" dated back to 1902.] From the OED: 1. A man or woman employed in making hay; esp. one engaged in Inflections • Tis the season: DTTW on door buster n. a discounted item of limited quantity intended to bring customers into a store; a sale of such items; a loss-leader. Also attrib. Categories: Also see ESPN The Magazine on the roots of "boxing ring." • LL on venti and other verbal concoctions of Starbucks: [T]he Starbucksian marketeer who came up with the name was probably thinking of the Italian for "twenty". Or "winds", take your pick. Of course, the Italians would use the metric system, and 20 fluid ounces in metric is approximately 591.476 cc, but I don't think that cinque nove uno virgola quattro sette sei is going to make it as a product name. I guess you could round up and call it seicento. • Ever notice how better can be ambiguous? I asked my wife how she was feeling, and she said, "I'm better." "All better?" I asked? No, but better, she had to explain. It made me realize better is idiomatic here; it really should be "best." After all, you wouldn't say "all stronger." Update: It gets even crazier. An ad says, "With Nexium, you don't just feel better, you are better. And better is better." • My sister gave me this notepad for my birthday a couple months ago, just took a picture of it with my new phonecam:
• I also asked my sister, a college student in Ontario, about this excerpt of native Canadian by Geoff Pullum: "Cripes! Grade thirteen! Here's a loonie -- buy yourself a Coffee Crisp, eh?" Lisa says: "That was entertaining. I would like to point out that I have never ever heard the expression "Cripes" in Ontario (or anywhere else). Also, grade thirteen and OAC's are not equivalent to SAT's. SAT's are tests, OAC's are classes. They are more like AP courses." • This adjective and noun phrase in the opening of this Slate's review isn't sitting right with me: "National Treasure, another Nic Cage-starring movie from blow-'em-up producer Jerry Bruckheimer..." That may make sense--I'm not sure--but I think it's too awkward to be worth it. But I like "blow-'em-up producer." It's as good as the first phrase is bad. • More from DTWW: yard sale n. in skiing or other snow-based sports, a fall or spill; a wipeout. [Perhaps from the appearance of "sporting goods spread out all over the yard."] Categories: English. Slang. Sports. x leitkultur n. mainstream or guiding culture. [German leit 'leading (adj.); leader' + kultur 'culture'] Categories: Germany. German. x • I was moved to look up the etymologies of berserk (or beserk, as I thought it was spelled) and hubbub (or hubub, as I thought it was spelled) berserk • Etymologies can be deceiving. For example, when I read that feign came from the Latin "fingere," the verb for "shape" (since "feign" means to "fashion an impression or shape an image," as M-W says; figure, effigy, fiction, and figment are cognates), I assumed that this is where finger comes from, too, since we use fingers to give things shape. But it's just a coincidence. From OnEtDc: finger: • I also wondered if ever was a cognate of aver and very. Nope. At least not at the level of Latin; maybe P.I.E. OnEtDc again: ever • From Michael Wittmer's new book on heaven and worldview (hey, that was my idea!) Metaphysics ... entered our vocabulary by a fluke of history. The great philosopher Aristotle once gave a series of lectures on the nature of reality. Since these lectures on reality appeared on the shelf after his lectures on physics, one of his students began calling this branch of philosophy "metaphysics," meta being the Greek word for "after." Thus the term "metaphysics" simply means the study of reality. • Previous column and inflections • Etymology Today from M-W: arduous\AHR-juh-wus\ 1 a : hard to accomplish or achieve : difficult *b: marked by great labor or effort : strenuous 2 : hard to climb : steep "To forgive is the most arduous pitch human nature can arrive at." When Richard Steele published that line in The Guardian in 1709, he was using "arduous" in what was apparently a fairly new way for English writers in his day: to imply that something was steep or lofty as well as difficult. Steele's use is one of the earliest documented in English for that meaning, but he didn't commit it to paper until almost 200 years after the first uses of the word in its "hard to accomplish" sense. Although the "difficult" sense is older, the "steep" sense is very true to the word's origins; "arduous" derives from the Latin "arduus," which means "high" or "steep." • Previous E.T. And I thought life's big questions were supposed to be hard; all you have to do is click here for "33 Amazing Laws of Success and Prosperity" ... ... or bone up on your Encyclopedia Britannica, like this guy did. New Social Security Plan Allows Workers To Put Portion Of Earnings On Favorite Team x Office-Newsletter Editor Refuses To Back Down x Childhood Friend Stops Writing After Two E-mails x |