Language and usage Archive

June 29, 2008

 Note to bloggers and other journalists: "reign in"

... meaning "restrain," should be spelled "rein in."

May 05, 2008

 From the language-police blotter

Is it sexist to say that Hillary Clinton is trying to "claw her way" to the nomination? That Sen. Obama managed to "ram one of her lies back down her throat"? Would it be sexist to use the same images about Rudy Giuliani or John McCain?

March 31, 2008

 MC Bill, cold chillin' in Cali

Bill Clinton kicks it old school in Cali.

March 27, 2008

 NPR frames itself

NPR stokes the liberal-bias canard.

 Mad Liberalism

Won't someone stop the hybrid-foreign-policy madness?

March 25, 2008

 Urdon't

The new PM of Pakistan is being sworn in, in English. Sounds odd. Apparently, Urdu is the national language and the language of the Constitution, but English is the official language. I understand that there’s a lot of resentment against native Urdu speakers and the dread Indian influence, but almost everyone understands Urdu, whereas only about half the population understands...

March 17, 2008

March 15, 2008

 Defining infamy down

"infamous" is the new "awesome."

March 01, 2008

 Carlos Guttierez be tripping

Is the Secretary of Commerce a nineteen-year-old girl?

February 22, 2008

 McCain's demexch

An essential word to rescue from the dying Eyak language.

February 07, 2008

 Mittenfreude

What's the opposite of Obamania?

January 27, 2008

 Wish-I'd-said-that Dep't

From The Nonprofiteer: "Volunteers can move mountains, provided there's a staff member around with a supply of scaffolding, tools, wheelbarrows, safety glasses and maps to the new location."

January 03, 2008

 Vegan Cane Sugar?

I like to think that I'm pretty sympathetic to vegetarianism: it's superior on environmental and moral grounds, and so even if I'm not there yet, I can see why people would advocate for it. But I think we're getting a little ridiculous here. Last night, my wife brought home a package of what was labeled as "Vegan Cane Sugar." Vegan?...

December 27, 2007

 Dollars to donuts, 1:1

I guess we'll need a new expression for long odds.

December 08, 2007

 Euphemism of the month

In Romney-speak, a paid field organizer is a "super volunteer."

December 05, 2007

 "Ness" monster spotted in HRC's camp

"Presumptuousness"? What's wrong with "presumption"?

October 08, 2007

 Watermarks

Huckabee errs on watermarks.

October 02, 2007

 A rebuttal is not a refutation

But a CNN headline-writer can't tell the difference.

September 27, 2007

 "Rambling" in speeches: a scientific challenge

Why are speeches by Middle Eastern leaders invariably described by American journalists as "rambling"?

September 26, 2007

 Your metaphor police in action

James' reflections on the fate of bubbles provokes me to poke at the implode bubble itself. For some reason this word, which specifically refers to the sudden inward collapse of something resisting external pressure, has floated into careless use to describe all sorts of destruction and failure where explode would be a more appropriate metaphor. A TV tube would implode...

September 14, 2007

 A cheap translation trick

Run it backwards and forwards.

 Funny ha ha

Chinglish manual for a router - not so funny.

September 11, 2007

 al Qaeda where?

"Al Qaeda in Iraq" has become just "al Qaeda".

August 06, 2007

 Writing

Two of your genial hosts have been having a self-referential episode that readers might enjoy, if only as a Gallagher and Shean routine. I sent out to some colleagues my approximately annual update of a longish memo for students about writing, and Mark suggested I post it. OK, here it is, with some free samples: Clearly and its treacherous kin...

May 28, 2007

 And we have a winner ...

... for the Latin-antiwar-slogan contest.

 "Romani ite domum" Dep't

Kevin Drum wants to say "bring 'em home" in Latin. Apparently the closest you can get is "Copiae subducentes sunt."

April 27, 2007

 On "clap-traps" and claptrap

Before "claptrap" meant "bullshit," "clap-traps" were applause lines.

April 09, 2007

 Concerning "unit cohesion" and the art of rhetoric

A former tank platoon sergeant turns tough-guy military rhetoric back on itself in the "don't ask, don't tell" debate.

March 09, 2007

 "Tow the line"

The language police have taken into custody one of Orwell's "dying metaphors."

October 18, 2006

 Vulgarians at the gate

"There is no greater love that can be displayed than for a person to lay down their life for others." Is there any way to make that sentence worse?

September 23, 2006

 New Year's greetings

On the choice between "Gut yontiff" and "L'shanah tovah."

September 02, 2006

August 19, 2006

 Beyond "sounding brass"

I encounter a new translation of St. Paul's famous ode to love from First Corinthians. ("If I speak in the tongues of men and angels, but have not love...")

August 05, 2006

 Euphemism of the month

Brent Wilkes has a new term for systematic bribery. He calls it "transactional lobbying."

July 28, 2006

 Tell it, Kevin!

Kevin Drum: Clearly, the Republican Party is the party of common sense. After all, if you give a few hundred dollars a month to the poorest of the working poor, it's only fair that you also give several million dollars to the richest of the idle rich.

May 17, 2006

 Tony Snow and the tar baby

No, there's nothing wrong with saying "tar baby." But it sounds funny coming from an advocate of the "War on Terror."

May 11, 2006

 The P.C. of the right

Yes, they've got it too.

March 22, 2006

 You can call me Ray.. but you don't have to call me Democrat

Sam Seder is trying to make "RAYpublican" the mocking equivalent to "Democrat party." It won't work, but it also won't matter.

November 29, 2005

 Murder isn't "execution"

I wish newspaper reporters would stop confusing murders with executions.

January 16, 2005

 Get it strait, guys!

The New York Daily News runs aground in the dangerous straits of idiom.

December 25, 2004

 Gibbon's "ness" monster

My campaign against the "ness" monster -- the use of "valorousness" instead of "valor," "resoluteness" for "resolution" or "resolve," "perfidiousness" for "perfidy," and so on -- has not attracted the universal support on which I had counted. Eugene Volokh, a linguistic liberal and democrat, agrees on "perfidiousness" (which is no more than a mistaken back-formation), but balks at insisting on,...

December 16, 2004

 Deception and deceit II

Deception can be justified; deceit can't.

October 26, 2004

September 27, 2004

 The New York Times violates
    Strunk and White's first rule

A case study of a failure to omit needless words.

August 31, 2004

 The origin of "ness" monsters

-ness is Germanic; -ity and -itude are Classical. A true "ness" monster occurs when an adjective is made from a noun (as "perfidious" from "perfidy") and someone makes it back into a noun the wrong way.

July 16, 2004

 Gross terminological inexactitude

A murder isn't an execution, even if a future Prime Minister commits it.

May 04, 2004

 A word in thy ear, an thou wilt...

How we came to address individuals in the plural form.

April 22, 2004

 Additional "ness" monsters sighted

"Tenaciousness" for "tenacity" (a physicist interwiewed on ABC News) "Impetuousness" for "impetuosity" (from Inversions, by Iain Banks) These seem to me to illustrate the two poles of "ness" monstrosity: "tenaciousness" is a long, ugly substitute for "tenacity," a nice, vigorous word. By contrast, "impetuosity" actually adds a syllable to "impetuousness." The claim that "impetuosity" is superior must rest either on...

April 20, 2004

 "Ness"less ness monster

"Comfortability" for "comfort. Thanks to the reader who spotted it. He notes that it's in a reporter's account of casual conversation. Still......

April 17, 2004

 More "ness" monster sightings
    and a note on the commonality among the conservatisms

Adam Wolfson, editor of The Public Interest, contributes new two "ness" monsters in a single essay ("Conservatives and Neoconservatives," Winter 2004): "rapaciousness" for "rapacity" (p. 35) and "solictousness" for "solicitude" (p.44). (He does, however, use "acuity" correctly, sparing us "acuitousness.") The essay is otherwise well-written and well-argued (from the neocon viewpoint), making many useful distinctions and connections. Wolfson raises, without...

April 14, 2004

 As Kleiman once said ...

My chance to be an entry in some future Bartlett's: There is no more destructive force in human affairs -- not greed, not hatred -- than the desire to have been right. Non-attachment to possessions is of trivial value in comparison with non-attachment to opinions.

February 25, 2004

 Another "ness" monster

"Credulousness" for "credulity." Eugene Volokh seems to be quoting Clayton Cramer, but I can't find the monster in the Cramer post. Update Eugene reports that he was quoting the original title -- since changed -- of the Cramer post. He also points out that "credulousness" is attested as far back as 1598, only half a century after the first recorded...

February 09, 2004

 Nonstandard conversion tables, cont'd

0.000001 greetings = 1 microwave 0.5 one-eyed naval heroes = 1 half-Nelson 0.1 Southern beauties = 1 decibelle 0.1 spouse = 1 decimate 1,000,000,000,000 carpal joints = 1 terrorist...

February 06, 2004

 2000 mockingbirds = 2 kilomockingbirds

Did you know that the ratio of an igloo's circumferance to its diameter is Eskimo Pi? Neither did I, until Eugene Volokh sent me off to this table of non-standard conversion factors. [But shouldn't it be a trillion microphones to the megaphone?] Eugene has his own selections from the Wilkinson list, and one delicious addition: 1.5 dollops = 1 trollop...

January 27, 2004

 More "ness" monsters

"Maliciousness" for malice "Ubiquitousness" for ubiquity...

December 13, 2003

 Another "ness" monster

This one from William Saletan, whose prose I generally admire: "presumptuousness" for "presumption."...

December 05, 2003

 More sightings of the "ness" monster

A reader offers the following, all from internet sites: "frivolousness" for "frivolity" "tediousness" for "tedium" "audaciousness" for "audacity" and -- my favorite ever, I think: "zealousness" for "zeal." Keep those emails coming. I'd like to try for a comprehensive list....

December 03, 2003

 Another "ness" monster

Iron Lung, a poster on Slate's Fray, in the course of this extremely rude piece about Mickey Kaus, uses "vapidness" for "vapidity."...

November 12, 2003

 On Memes

One of Kevin Drum's commenters asks whether "meme" isn't just an unnecessarily fancy way of saying "idea." Kevin responds, more or less, that memes are "ideas that filter into a community rapidly, spread like a virus, and then just as rapidly die away. A meme that survives becomes something else: a concept, or an idea, or a principle." That may...

November 09, 2003

 A plague of "ness"es

A headline in today's Baltimore Sun notes that an official caught in controversy is being praised for her "candidness." Whatever happened to "candor"? I've also seen "valorousness" for "valor," "confusedness" for confusion, "cowardliness" for "cowardice," “maliciousness” for “malice,” “recursiveness” for “recursion” and (more than once) "novitiate" for "novice" (the "novitiate" properly designates the status or the period of time, not...
recipes

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