Eyeroll
I just overheard two guys at work discussing Tom DeLay's resignation from Congress, and I must say, it's hard to take such a conversation seriously when one of the guys keeps pronouncing indictment as in-'dikt-m&nt.
April 4, 2006 09:41 AM
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Word-o-phobe
As if "blogosphere" weren't already enough of an ugly and unnecessary word, Kurt Andersen now offers a coinage that makes life even less worth living:
blogospherese.
March 8, 2005 12:57 PM
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Electrocution?
Note to Gothamist, rest of world: Electrocution
does not mean injury by electrical shock. It means
death by electrical shock. If you don't die, you haven't been electrocuted.
This may seem like pedantry, but if bloggers want to claim to be journalists, they need to be able to distinguish clearly between death and non-death. Allowing readers to believe that dogs have been killed when they've merely been injured is inaccurate reporting.
December 28, 2004 09:24 AM
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materteral
Sometimes it seems like every college-degreed person in America, but me, is madly in love with this David Sedaris, who, frankly, I can't stand. But that's neither here nor there. Today's
Manhattan User's Guide uses the word materteral, which--as is clear from the context below--is the "aunt" equivalent of "avuncular."
In the old days, the voice of the holidays was the avuncular Burl Ives. Now, it's the more materteral David Sedaris, which is progress in our book.
[The
Mavens, on "materteral"]
December 2, 2004 09:47 AM
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bouquiner
I think it's funny that just after reading
this article, by a book-collecting professor, I read
today's French-Word-A-Day:
bouquiner (boo-kee-nay) verb
1. to hunt after, to collect, old books
2. (informal) to read
I really need to read more after work, and I definitely should start studying French again, but I'm always tired and the TV's so distracting. Sigh.
October 26, 2004 02:54 PM
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eleemosynary
"But Cash didn't go to Folsom for purely eleemosynary reasons." From
When the Jailhouse Rocked (washingtonpost.com)
M-W.com: "
eleemosynary -- of, relating to, or supported by charity"
October 5, 2004 03:01 PM
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Word-o-phile: Spanish Popeye
Spanish Popeye describes a loophole in New York City law regulating the adult-entertainment industry. The law permits a business to operate outside adult-entertainment zones if at least 60 percent of its merchandize is not X-rated. The
Times explains that the term is a coinage of Robert Sacklow, a buildings inspector who once found eighteen thousand copies of Popeye cartoons dubbed into Spanish, in a sex shop with "only" twelve thousand porn videos.
September 28, 2004 12:25 PM
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Irrefragable
irrefragable: Dictionary.com Word of the Day. irrefragable [
Dictionary.com Word of the Day]
I don't mean to brag, but it's rare these days for me to run across a non-technical word that I've never seen before. (By non-technical, I mean words that don't derive from science or mathematics or engineering. Anyone can aim the name of a chemical compound my way.)
Irrefragable makes me very happy.
December 9, 2002 06:32 PM
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Blog linguistics
Some comments on blog linguistics, because several people have asked me what the term means or whence it arises: Peter Merholz
coined the term in early 1999. Linguist Geoffrey Nunberg defends the use of the word [
RealAudio file]. And now there's
news that the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary have drafted an entry for the word
blog for inclusion in their venerable reference.
June 26, 2002 01:58 AM
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