Big Problems with the Little Finger, or, A Story of Pinkie
Anatoly looks at the word “pinkie”.
Anatoly looks at the word “pinkie”.
The Olympics can always bring out the Jingoist, (or is it Jingo?), in just about anyone. For ‘jingoist’ and ‘jingo’, the former has come to displace the latter as the agent noun corresponding to ‘jingoism’. A jingoist is a belligerent patriot and nationalist who favours an aggressive foreign policy.
The podictionary word of the week is “climax”.
Anatoly looks at the word “haberdasher”.
Last Sunday, in the NY Times, I read a book reviewer taking an author to task for her word use. The reviewer stated that “the last time I checked the American Heritage Dictionary, in spite of how computer trade journalists might choose to use the word, “architect” was not recognized as a verb”.
You don’t have to be an MD or a sick puppy to appreciate the enormous family of humorous medical terms, including ‘peanut butter balls’ (phenobarbitol), ‘horrendoplasty’ (an operation without a sunny forecast), or ‘duck’s disease’ (‘being short’, so-named for the non-NBA-ready stature of quackers).
The podictionary word of the week is “Anathema.”
Anatoly looks at the nickname “Hoosier”.
Test your wordpower against Oxford’s experts.
Ammon reflects on note-taking.
The podictionary word of the day is “mildew”.
Several times a year I speak on Minnesota Public Radio (MPR), a guest of Kerri Miller’s program “Midmorning News.” We usually advertise some general topic in advance, but, while I am in the studio, listeners are requested to ask any questions they like about word origins, regardless of the overarching theme. Sometimes I […]
David Crystal tells us that txtng is nothing worry about
Ammon Shea looks at Merriam’s madman.
It seems strange that in English we call W ‘double-U’ while in French its ‘double-V’. It’s usually written to resemble two Vs, rather than two Us. At Urbandictionary, the entry for W contains plenty of slurs against George Bush, and those who decided to have 3-Ws as the start of a web address.
Anatoly looks at the word “Buckeye”.