Thursday, January 30, 2003
;I suspect art doesn’t stand much of anywhere in the minds of US citizens, taken as a whole. If it did, the nation would experience robust public-sector support for art, from the regular commissioning of significant architecture by enthusiastic federal, state and local governments to direct subsidy of art museums and performing arts venues, large and small. Obviously we don’t—but don’t despair. Lots of Americans are crazy for the stuff, and they expend a good deal of energy making, looking at and talking about it. I don’t know how many of them live in Missouri’s bootheel—but then, how many people who can’t thrive without seeing the jungle choose to live in the desert? (Source Link)
Wednesday, January 29, 2003
The cost of dying in New York City will increase by five dollars.
Filed under The Numbers • (0) Comments • Permalink
;A young person whose appearance and behavior are not of a gentleman’s customary social circle is properly introduced as his nephew or niece. (Source Link)
Varieties of eucalyptus inc
;Maybe the Method works. But how do you explain to your spouse that for the next five months, you won’t be you? How do you get through life when you’re not yourself? Or as my actress sister wondered, “How do you order food from the craft services table?” (Source Link)
This is the personal weblog of Grant Barrett, editor of the Double-Tongued Dictionary, a collection of words from the fringes of English. More about this site...
Recent Entries
- A hearty endorsement of shout quotes: scare quotes used for emphasis
- How to buy a dictionary
- Jinx and padiddle: games we play
- Saying it wrong on purpose
- Nicknames from the Underground: Busharraf, Chillary, and Killadelphia
- New slang unpacked
- UPDATED: Crosswords in Black and White
- Find me in American Way Magazine
- Recent catchwords: read-alike, violin hickey, throw a Porsche at someone, Q-tip cruise, 1-800 car
- The Tell-All of the Century: Snitching Slang
- Fog line, instant ancestor, trashout
- See, ya kid: saying goodbye in slang
- Interview with British slang lexicographer Jonathon Green
- New Scientist: “Word nerds capture fleeting online English”
- The blueprints of a Craigslist apartment scam
Recent Catchwords
- park v. (5/16)
- whale eye n. (5/16)
- water buffalo n. (5/16)
- Churchill n. (5/15)
- moondust n. (5/15)
- mouse type n. (5/14)
- hung up adj. (5/14)
- sideways market n. (5/14)
- Bristol dust n. (5/14)
- booth turnaround n. (5/14)
- YAWN n. (5/13)
- doodlesocking n. (5/13)
- job and knock n. (5/13)
- radwaste n. (5/12)
- meat without feet n. (5/12)
- night-out money n. (5/12)
- podbusting n. (5/12)
- short-and-distort n. (5/12)
- yoging n. (5/12)
- nightstand Buddhist n. (5/9)
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