Onk!

You sounded really snobby, interjecting "conk!" after saying "Yes, that's right!" to her answer.
But props for laughing at your "Frederick March" mash-up of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels!
Labels: jeopardy
Language Liberalism Freethought Birds
Verbing Weirds Language only if you're expecting it to work in a simple way. This is a special case of the more general truth that Language Weirds.
Only when a republic's life is in danger should a man uphold his government when it is in the wrong. There is no other time.
The church says Earth is flat; but I have seen its shadow on the moon, and I have more confidence in a shadow than the church.
If we can't find Heaven, there are always bluejays.
Labels: jeopardy
John Keats was born today in 1795, and died 25 years later of tuberculosis.
I see there's a new book out by Professor Gigante of Stanford about Keats and his brother George - the American one - which sounds fascinating.
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And a happy Hallowe'en to you, too!
I am astonishingly ancient, and the brain is too worn down and slow to keep anywhere near in step with social trends, and anyway the whole Hallowe'en hoohah is a relative newcomer to Britain in its present form, but, but ... but am I alone in finding it odd to expect that Hallowe'en should be a happy experience? Being wished happiness is always welcome, of course, but it strikes me that what I want today above all else is safe survival.
No, you're certainly not alone - I know plenty of non-Americans who feel exactly the same way. On my Welsh mailing list someone once asked how to say "Happy Halloween" and the answer came back very quickly:
I suppose it would be 'Nos Galangaeaf Da' or 'Nos Galangaeaf Llawen' on analogy with 'Happy New Year' or 'Merry Christmas'. But no Welshman would ever say this! Halloween's a terrible time!
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TV: The Mentalist which was pretty good. The Middle - I loved Brick saying his sheet-over-the-head costume was the "ghost of Ernest Hemingway" but "with a different belt it could pass for F Scott Fitzgerald". Case Histories on Masterpiece: okay, but I could have done without the intrusive flashbacks - we get it, someone drowned - and the story was too coincidence-filled. Also, I couldn't understand half of what the cop's son said. Seriously. Psych - I miss the '90s lead-ins, but I'm glad to see they're backing off on quite how insane Lassie is. A nice little ep.
Labels: entertainment
Was this the only episode of "Case Histories" on Masterpiece that you've seen? We saw them all, and considered them nowhere near as good as Lynley, let alone Morse, Lewis or Mirren's "Prime Suspect" (haven't seen Bello's rip-off).
We agree that the flashbacks are indeed intrusive; in earlier episodes it's made clear that the victim in the water was Brodie's sister.
Each episode of "Case Histories" was almost totally coincidence-filled, which begged credulity almost to the point of risibility.
We couldn't understand half of what the cop's son said, either. Or most of those Scots, for that matter.
First and most likely last. I have one on the DVR but am not particularly motivated to watch it. Wasn't even before I read your comment, for that matter! :-D
Just heard on NPR's "Fresh Air" that the Alec Guinness "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" is being released on DVD. That'd be a whole lot better use of time than watching the "Case Histories" series, IMHO. (Remember who played Mrs. Smiley?)
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Wow. Just ... wow.
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Wednesday as I was walking in and staring at the dawn, a dark and silent shape flew just over my head into the large tree (I still don't know what kind it is) along the path. A Cooper's hawk, sitting on a low branch in the early dawn and watching the sun rise. A single crow alit in the high top branches and began calling "hawwwwk hawwwwwk hawwwwk" but the Cooper's paid him no mind and the crow didn't come lower, and eventually flew off to join some couple of dozen of his kin as they tumbled through the sky heading somewhere off west of here. The hawk remained for a few minutes longer, and then he too went about his business, swiftly and silently. As did I, not nearly so swiftly...
I trust that during yesterday's snow, your local birds just fluffed up their feathers a bit more and soldiered on. We humans, not so much.
Did you snap any bird-in-snow photos?
Idle thought [cue Andy Rooney impression here]: Have you ever noticed how many different birds are sports team mascots (including Pittsburgh's own flightless avians)? I seem to have missed sighting Fredbird the Redbird during the World Series, however.
Around here we didn't even get "white stuff", as they call it, on the ground. Real snow is yet to come.
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But a Constitution of Government once changed from Freedom, can never be restored. Liberty, once lost, is lost forever.I highly recommend Passionate Sage by John Ellis, and then John Adams by David McCullough, for those who want to know more about this least known of the great Founders - or Ellis's Founding Brothers for an overview of that remarkable group of men.
Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.
—'Argument in Defense of the Soldiers in the Boston Massacre Trials,' December 1770
There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty.
(And Writer's Almanac last year featured a pessimistic quote we must prove wrong:) Democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There was never a democracy that did not commit suicide.
Labels: birthdays
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It's been quite a while, hasn't it? But here's another gorgeous photo from Cassini: four moons and the edge of the rings. Ids are below the photo - see if you can spot all four. (Select the photo for a bigger version; you might need it!)
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Retsler reached inside, and pulled out a Big Mac and fries...He pulled the wrapper back and took a bite, tasting mustard, catsup, pickles and mayonnaise long before he got to the meat.I'm guessing it's been a long time since she had a Big Mac. If she ever has. Remember the jingle?
Labels: entertainment, writing
I have eaten once at McDonald's. I do not intend to repeat the experience.
Certainly your option and your right. De gustibus etc.
There are plenty of things that even good authors (let alone translators!) have written about despite having never experienced -- in many cases, fortunately!
Being vegetarian, other than an emergency orange juice I haven't eaten at McD's since, while on a day-trip with my (now-late) dad in winter '93, I had a large salad with diet dressing in Ukiah -- it was that or starve :-(
Of course I don't say people can only write about what they know, but there is such a thing as research. And when you get a detail like this wrong - lots of people do eat Big Macs, after all - it jumps out at a reader.
I'm a little late on this, but I agree. Details gotten wrong like this jerk you out of the story. It's no longer a world, it's words written by a person who got something wrong. This happens occasionally and argues strongly to write what you know, because otherwise, as sure as the world, if you don't know, someone else will.
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Today in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1933, Valerie Worth was born. I love her Small Poems.
nice poems
Well, no, actually they don't look as though they could be anything of the sort. Do they?
Don't they?
Well, no, they look utterly beyond holding in the hand. As though, if one were to sweep them - and that in itself is unthinkable - they would heap, hundred on hundred, thousand upon thousand, million upon million, uncountable trillions, overflowing the hand, let alone the palm, let alone thought. A lot of them.
I suppose that depends on where you live and how many of them you can see.
Ah, yes, that's true.
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CNN reports:
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and other top brass have repeatedly said any deal to keep U.S. troops in Iraq beyond the withdrawal deadline would require a guarantee of legal protection for American soldiers.Glenn Greenwald goes a little deeper:
But the Iraqis refused to agree to that, opening up the prospect of Americans being tried in Iraqi courts and subjected to Iraqi punishment.
The negotiations were strained following WikiLeaks’ release of a diplomatic cable that alleged Iraqi civilians, including children, were killed in a 2006 raid by American troops rather than in an airstrike as the U.S. military initially reported.
That cable was released by WikiLeaks in May, 2011, and, as McClatchy put it at the time, “provides evidence that U.S. troops executed at least 10 Iraqi civilians, including a woman in her 70s and a 5-month-old infant, then called in an airstrike to destroy the evidence, during a controversial 2006 incident in the central Iraqi town of Ishaqi.” The U.S. then lied and claimed the civilians were killed by the airstrike. Although this incident had been previously documented by the U.N. special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, the high-profile release of the cable by WikiLeaks generated substantial attention (and disgust) in Iraq, which made it politically unpalatable for the Iraqi government to grant the legal immunity the Obama adminstration was seeking. Indeed, it was widely reported at the time the cable was released that it made it much more difficult for Iraq to allow U.S. troops to remain beyond the deadline under any conditions.He then goes on to point out
Assuming the truth of those chat logs, [the leaker] was motivated precisely by seeing cables of the sort that detailed this civilian slaughter and subsequent cover-up in Iraq, and the extreme levels of theft and oppression by Arab dictators, and the desire to have the world know about it. Meanwhile, those responsible for the Iraq War, and who suppressed freedom and democracy in the Middle East by propping up those tyrants, and who committed a slew of other illegal and deeply corrupt acts, continue to prosper and wield substantial power.Read it all, why don't you? And contemplate just how we're running this war... and the rest of them.
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Okay, granted this moon is from six weeks ago, but it fits Halloween beautifully...
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In 1823 this Scot obtained a patent for a process that made silk, paper and "other substances impervious to water and air"Still, only one of them got it. One said "Carnegie" which is sort of reasonable, though Andrew of that name was actually born in 1835 and lived well into the 20th century and wasn't an inventor...
Labels: jeopardy
Yeah, that startled us too.
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So, Mark Trail is hot on the trail of someone who is banding Canada geese with gold bands engraved with Bible verses. (Yeah, it's been a strange ride...)
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John Hollander was born today in New York City in 1929. He is currently the Sterling Professor emeritus of English at Yale, and still writing (his most recent collection, A Draft of Light, was published last year).
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Nice birds and photos. I have not seen many house finches lately?
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Or perhaps I'll celebrate my new router with a new Sky Watch! This was taken on the last morning in September.
A wonderful shot with the rays of the sun shining through both the cumulus and cirrus cloud formations
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So, I bought a new router today - which is really wonderful, taking full advantage of that cable modem. I'll celebrate by giving you Paul Krugman on Paul Ryan et al: Ryan expresses outrage over what President Obama is saying:
Just last week, the President told a crowd in North Carolina that Republicans are in favor of, quote, “dirtier air, dirtier water, and less people with health insurance.” Can you think of a pettier way to describe sincere disagreements between the two parties on regulation and health care?Just for the record: why is this petty? Why is it anything but a literal description of GOP proposals to weaken environmental regulation and repeal the Affordable Care Act?
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hello, nice to meet ur blog
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The local car commercial (Antwerpen) just told us
you can get up to 140% off the Kelly Blue Book value for your trade-in!Somehow that doesn't seem like such a good deal to me.
Labels: humor
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Well, okay then.
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Labels: birthdays, entertainment
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still having connection problems on the weekends... very strange
Labels: entertainment
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Today in 1805, John Russell Bartlett was born. He was a co-founder of the American Ethnological Society and author of that invaluable book, A Dictionary of American Regionalisms (on line here). Some entries:
HANDSOME. In familiar language this word is used among us with great latitude, and, like some other words mentioned in this Glossary, is difficult to define. "In general," says Dr. Webster, "when applied to things, it imports that the form is agreeable to the eye, or to the taste; and when applied to manner, it conveys the idea of suitableness or propriety with grace."
HANG. 'To get the hang of a thing,' is to get the knack, or habitual facility of doing it well. A low expression frequently heard among us. In the Craven Dialect of England is the word hank, a habit; from which this word hang may perhaps be derived.
TO HANG AROUND. To loiter about. To 'hang around' a person, is to hang about him, to seek to be intimate with him.
HARUM-SCARUM. A low but frequent expression applied to flighty persons; persons always in a hurry, as if they were hared or frightened themselves, or haring others by their precipitancy; as, he is a harum-scarum fellow.--Johnson.
TO HAVE A SAY. To express an opinion. A phrase in vulgar use.
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Paul Krugman: What a tragedy. A rich, productive continent, which has produced arguably the most decent societies in human history, is tearing itself apart because its elite insisted on embarking on a dubious monetary project, and now can’t bring itself to take the steps necessary to give that project a chance of working.
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Remember I pointed out on Monday how Limbaugh was complaining about Obama sending troops "to wipe out Christians"? At the very end of that show he said, just before signing off,
Is that right? The Lord's Resistance Army is being accused of really bad stuff? Child kidnapping, torture, murder, that kind of stuff? Well, we just found out about this today. We're gonna do, of course, our due diligence research on it.Okay. The LRA is not something brand new. Rush and his dittoheads may not have heard of it, but it's not low-profile or anything. And this from Kevin Drum at MoJo pretty much sums it up.
Due diligence? A quick scan of Wikipedia would have been plenty. The character of the LRA is not exactly a state secret. In fact, it's so not a state secret that the Bush administration declared them a terrorist organization in 2001 and the hyperpartisan 111th Congress passed the LRA Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act unanimously last year. That is, unanimously in both houses. Every single Democrat and every single Republican, moderates and tea partiers alike, supported it in both the House and the Senate. Every single one. Jesus.
If Limbaugh hadn't heard of the LRA that's disturbing, but perhaps not unbelievable. From Europe it seems sometimes that the United States hardly exercises its mind about sub-saharan Africa. That's a silly generalisation, of course, but is there any truth in it? And perhaps over here we have a bit of a blind spot for South America (which might explain why we didn't see the Falklands invasion coming). Something to do with history, no doubt.
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Today is the birthday of American poet, too early dead, Allen Hoey. He was born in 1952 in Kingston, New York, and died last year.
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SUBTUS CONDITUR HUIUS ECCLESIÆ ET VRBIS CONDITOR CHRISTOPHORUS WREN, QUI VIXIT ANNOS ULTRA NONAGINTA, NON SIBI SED BONO PUBLICO. LECTOR SI MONUMENTUM REQUIRIS CIRCUMSPICE Obijt XXV Feb: An°: MDCCXXIII Æt: XCI.Check his Wikipedia page for a gallery of his architectural work.
Here in its foundations lies the architect of this church and city, Christopher Wren, who lived beyond ninety years, not for his own profit but for the public good. Reader, if you seek his monument - look around you. Died 25 Feb. 1723, age 91.
Labels: birthdays
Sad news today that St Paul's is being closed to visitors because of the camp of "occupy" protesters around the entrance.
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Labels: birthdays, entertainment
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Not many butterflies this year - they planted weirdly in the park. But I have seen a few, and here are some from the past few weeks.
Labels: butterflies, myphotos
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![]() | ![]() |
Lotte Lenya | Not Lotte Lenya! (Blossom Dearie) |
Labels: entertainment
I wish I could tell you who that picture is of, but I certainly don't think it's Lenya!
Quite right. I don't remember where I found it ... hmmm. Maybe she played Lenya in a film or something.
Anyone know who she is?
Are you old enough to remember when Dick Cavett had Lenya on his late-night talk show on ABC (opposite Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin) in the early 1970s? Cavett had been a fan of hers since the NYC production of "Three Penny Opera" back in his Yale days. Alas, decades of smoking had taken a horrendous toll on her voice.
Husband wondered if the gal in the other might be a young Barbara Stanwyck, but when I checked Google Images I thought not. Perhaps another European actress of Lenya's pre-US era?
Oops! The more I think about it, I may be confusing Lenya with someone else. Perhaps Cavett remembered Lenya from old German recordings of the opera.
(I'm the same anonymous.) There are recordings from trhe late '20s of Lenya singing songs from 3PO and Mahagonny, in which she has a high, almost cartoonish voice. You can also hear it in the G.W. Pabst Threepenny movie, in which she plays Jenny. (There's a Criterion restoration of that film, by the way, which also contains a French version with substantially different actors but shot-for-shot identical. I must confess that I prefer the French version.) By the time she and Weill got to the U.S. though, she had pretty much the Lenya voice we knew and loved.
Mystery woman is Blossom Dearie, a jazz vocalist.
Well, that makes sense. I'm sure she covered some Lenye numbers. I'm embarrassed not to have recognized her, though; I used to have some of her LPs before they were lost in a move.
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Labels: birthdays, entertainment
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I got a new phone over the weekend. Ported all my apps and media and contacts etc over, no problem. All fine and dandy... until I went to order delivery for supper and discovered that I can't make a phone call. They couldn't hear me speak (though I could hear them).
Labels: miscellaneous
...like the (presumably apocryphal) joke in the 1970s in which a young kid claims surprise upon learning that Paul McCartney was in another band before Wings.
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Here's some good coverage of the oil spill in New Zealand.
I have a friend who won't buy gas at a BP station. I understand this, but I question whether BP is really worse than the rest of them. Have we forgotten the Exxon Valdez? How about the Atlantic Empress, carrying Mobil oil? The Amoco Cadiz? The Odyssey? Or is "forgotten" the right word for those last three? It's certainly not for the ongoing Conoco-Phillips undersea-drilling-leak currently (yes, right now) taking place in the Yellow Sea. (And that's what you're seeing in the picture, not the Gulf of Mexico.) You can't forget what you've never been told.And not talking about it unless they absolutely have to - like, the oil is in our front yard - seems to be the regular MO for the media in this country, who are hand-in-glove with the oil companies.
Labels: links, miscellaneous, politics
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Rush Limbaugh (my emphasis):
"Is that right? The Lord's Resistance Army is being accused of really bad stuff? Child kidnapping, torture, murder, that kind of stuff? Well, we just found out about this today. We're gonna do, of course, our due diligence research on it. But nevertheless we got a hundred troops being sent over there to fight these guys -- and they claim to be Christians."Apparently, claiming to be Christians is all it takes to get certain influential people in this country to take your side.
Labels: politics
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TV: Psych - a strange episode, I thought: where was the 1990s opening? Aha - at the end - brilliant. Modern Family - "Exact. Same. Closet." made me laugh. The Middle - Axl will be all right, even if he is a slacker. Harry's Law - I simply don't understand the secondary plot. If the guy had cashed in his life insurance policy to pay Tommy, who'd care? So why is it so "beyond repugnant" that he made Tommy his beneficiary? Seriously? And I really hated the main plot. That girl will do it again. The Jenna leaving was sweet, though, even though I'll miss her character. The Mentalist - very nice episode. Cho's sexy dressed down. And I like the "neurotic as a border collie" and "that man has the conscience of a mollusc" scene. Also the "I wonder if our new boss is in over his head." "Really? I don't." exchange. And Cho's "Hey. How you doing? You're under arrest for the attempted murder of ... everybody"? Priceless delivery.
Labels: entertainment
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Labels: birthdays, entertainment
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1. The omission of all superfluous or silent letters; as a in bread. Thus bread, head, give, breast, built, meant, realm, friend, would be spelt, bred, hed, giv, brest, bilt, ment, relm, frend. Would this alteration produce any inconvenience, any embarrassment or expense? By no means. On the other hand, it would lessen the trouble of writing, and much more, of learning the language; it would reduce the true pronunciation to a certainty; and while it would assist foreigners and our own children in acquiring the language, it would render the pronunciation uniform, in different parts of the country, and almost prevent the possibility of changes.He won with draft and plow, but not with much he wanted. And here's his motivation:
2. A substitution of a character that has a certain definite sound, for one that is more vague and indeterminate. Thus by putting ee instead of ea or ie, the words mean, near, speak grieve, zeal, would become meen, neer, speek, greev, zeel. This alteration could not occasion a moments trouble; at the same time it would prevent a doubt respecting the pronunciation; whereas the ea and ie having different sounds, may give a learner much difficulty. Thus greef should be substituted for grief; kee for key; beleev for believe; laf for laugh; dawter for daughter; plow for plough; tuf for tough; proov for prove; blud for blood; and draft for draught. In this manner ch in Greek derivatives, should be changed into k; for the English ch has a soft sound, as in cherish; but k always a hard sound. Therefore character, chorus, cholic, architecture, should be written karacter, korus, kolic, arkitecture; and were they thus written, no person could mistake their true pronunciation.
3. Thus ch in French derivatives should be changed into sh; machine, chaise, chevalier, should be written masheen, shaze, shevaleer; and pique, tour, oblique, should be written peek, toor, obleek.
1. The simplicity of the orthography would facilitate the learning of the language. It is now the work of years for children to learn to spell; and after all, the business is rarely accomplished. A few men, who are bred to some business that requires constant exercise in writing, finally learn to spell most words without hesitation; but most people remain, all their lives, imperfect masters of spelling, and liable to make mistakes, whenever they take up a pen to write a short note. Nay, many people, even of education and fashion, never attempt to write a letter, without frequently consulting a dictionary.Think about the publishing business. Think about the Internet!
But with the proposed orthography, a child would learn to spell, without trouble, in a very short time, and the orthography being very regular, he would ever afterwards find it difficult to make a mistake. It would, in that case, be as difficult to spell wrong as it is now to spell right.
Besides this advantage, foreigners would be able to acquire the pronunciation of English, which is now so difficult and embarrassing, that they are either wholly discouraged on the first attempt, or obliged, after many years labor, to rest contented with an imperfect knowledge of the subject.
2. A correct orthography would render the pronunciation of the language, as uniform as the spelling in books. A general uniformity thro the United States, would be the event of such a reformation as I am here recommending. All persons, of every rank, would speak with some degree of precision and uniformity. Such a uniformity in these states is very desireable; it would remove prejudice, and conciliate mutual affection and respect.
3. Such a reform would diminish the number of letters about one sixteenth or eighteenth. This would save a page in eighteen; and a saving of an eighteenth in the expense of books, is an advantage that should not be overlooked.
4. But a capital advantage of this reform in these states would be, that it would make a difference between the English orthography and the American. This will startle those who have not attended to the subject; but I am confident that such an event is an object of vast political consequence. For,
The alteration, however small, would encourage the publication of books in our own country. It would render it, in some measure, necessary that all books should be printed in America. The English would never copy our orthography for their own use; and consequently the same impressions of books would not answer for both countries. The inhabitants of the present generation would read the English impressions; but posterity, being taught a different spelling, would prefer the American orthography.
Generations of students grew up with Webster's Dictionary.
On my Med. lessons we have met him again and again.
I guess 250 years us sufficient time to measuer the greatness of a figure.
fertility
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Terry Pratchett's latest, Snuff, is a Vimes novel. That means there's a lot of action, but also a lot of thinking - about what makes us human (for lack of a better word; even Angua thinks about that), and also what makes civilization work. Here's one of my favorite bits:
Labels: civilrights, entertainment, miscellaneous, politics
A new Terry Pratchett book? Cool! Will have to bear it in mind next time I'm in a bookshop.
A few years ago I would have been up to the moment with this sort of news, but I'm no longer involved in the online Pratchett fandom scene. (Don't ask. It was an ugly divorce.)
Of course, the themes in this excerpt are also present in earlier books such as Jingo and Night Watch.
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Labels: birthdays, entertainment, poetry, translation
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Labels: birthdays, entertainment
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Okaaaaay. David Foster Wallace's The Pale King's narrator's employment was $600. But Heathcliff's novel was $1000?
Labels: jeopardy
We too have noticed lately that the occasional $1,000 "Jeopardy!" clue has seemed easier than the $600 or $800 one in the same category -- to the point of thinking it couldn't be attributable solely to the idiosyncrasies of our individual knowledge bases. Thanks for mentioning having noticed the same thing as well. (Unless all 3 of us are losing our minds -- LOL!)
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Another from the prolific Paul Krugman:
A wonderful juxtaposition:I'm laughing, all right.Options Group’s Karp said he met last month over tea at the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York with a trader who made $500,000 last year at one of the six largest U.S. banks.Meanwhile, Catherine Rampell reports on Bankers’ Salaries vs. Everyone Else’s, telling us that
The trader, a 27-year-old Ivy League graduate, complained that he has worked harder this year and will be paid less. The headhunter told him to stay put and collect his bonus.
“This is very demoralizing to people,” Karp said. “Especially young guys who have gone to college and wanted to come onto the Street, having dreams of becoming millionaires.”the average salary in the industry in 2010 was $361,330 — five and a half times the average salary in the rest of the private sector in the city ($66,120). By contrast, 30 years ago such salaries were only twice as high as in the rest of the private sector.It would all be hilariously funny if these people weren’t destroying the world.
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Labels: miscellaneous
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5 Comments:
Uh-oh, we thought it was "conk."
Agreed that Alex handled the "Frederic March" gaffe with self-deprecating grace -- hosting "Jeopardy!" has GOT to be a tricky job. I suspect some of the flubs that viewers attribute to Alex are in fact more the fault of the clue-writers, but as the on-air talent he has to take the blame.
It is "conk" - but not only "conk". MWU says käŋk, känch -- -ŋk is usual near waters where the conch occurs and hence in sense 3 which is "a resident native of the Bahamas b : any of various persons resident in the Florida keys and nearby parts of the mainland".
I constantly wonder why his crack team of researchers doesn't look up pronunciation for him!
During this week's "Jeopardy!" Tournament of Champions, there was a clue for translating the Portuguese SIM into Russian. Alex pronounced it "sĭmm" [cringe] instead of "sĩ" (signifying a nasalized vowel) -- somewhere between "sing" and "seeng." I agree with your comment that clue writers should give Alex the approximate correct pronunciations of foreign words in languages he doesn't know.
On a similar note, I came across a video this week of a young American planning a photographic sojourn to my grandmother's native village of Fajã Grande on the island of Flores in the Azores, and she pronounced it as if it in were Spanish -- "FAH-hah GRAHN-day" (instead of "fah-ZHAHNG GRAHND" in European Portuguese*). Presumably once she arrived, the locals politely adjusted her diction (while doubtless clucking behind her ignorant back).
* = "fah-ZHAHNG GRAHN-djē" in Brazilian diction.
So, is the Portuguese name Joana pronounced ... errr, how is it pronounced? I know final O is OO - funnily, I learned that from Russian, which spells names like Figo FIGU.
And is Jose Saramago a ho-ZAY or dzho-say?
Joana
zho-AH-nah
Figo
FEE-goo
José Saramago
zho-ZEH sah-rah-MAH-goo
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