Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Hiring horror stories
Saturday, March 17, 2007
Southern Appalachian English
Michael Montgomery, editor of the Dictionary of Smoky Mountain English, sent along this announcement about his web site. There’s some good stuff there.
...
Dear All,
This is to announce the launching of a revised version of my website on the English language spoken in Appalachia, which has been created through the gracious assistance of my home department (English) at the University of South Carolina. At http://www.cas.sc.edu/engl/dictionary/ you will find a range of resources for experiencing and exploring the speech of the mountains from West Virginia to Alabama.
Whether you are a college teacher looking for material to develop a unit on Appalachian speech, a researcher in another field wanting to learn more about the subject, or just someone who likes to have the ears bathed in traditional speech from time to time, you will find plenty of interest here.
This site includes a half-dozen papers I have written for a lay readership and more than twenty audio segments from the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and North Carolina that were recorded by my late colleague Joseph Sargent Hall in 1939. Each recording has an accompanying transcripts with many terms that are highlighted and lead to dictionary entries with pertinent historical information and further quotations. A comprehensive annotated bibliography of more than 600 items offers nearly endless opportunities for continuing study of the history, vocabulary, pronunciation, grammar, naming patterns and practices, use in literature, attitudes and perceptions, and other facets of the region’s English.
I would be proud for you to spend some time with this site and to pass this announcement along to anyone else who might have an interest in it. And of course I encourage suggestions for additions and improvements at any time (yes, I know that some of the links don’t work at the moment).
With best regards,
Michael Montgomery
Professor of English
University of South Carolina
Filed under Language and Languages • (2) Comments • Permalink
Thursday, March 15, 2007
One Way? No Way!
This video on Streets Blog shows perfectly why I am against turning Sixth and Seventh Avenues in Park Slope, Brooklyn, into one-way streets.
It’s my neighborhood: I live between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on Park Place, more or less a block below Flatbush Avenue (the streets intersect at an angle, so we’re closer to Flatbush in one direction than we are in the other), which is a daily parade of stupid: Overly fast and overly aggressive drivers. Light-runners. Big trucks which sound their airhorns at all hours. Big trucks which use their very loud jake brakes at all hours. It’s a crappy, crumby, inhuman thoroughfare and it’s what I fear Sixth and Seventh Avenues will become. One way streets are fast, loud, dangerous, and unfriendly neighborhood-killers.
Friday, March 09, 2007
Jeff Prucher’s Brave New Web Site
Filed under Dictionaries and Lexicography • (0) Comments • Permalink
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
- 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
- American Crossword Puzzle Tournament
Recent Catchwords
- nightstand Buddhist n. (5/9)
- brown gas n. (5/9)
- rewilding n. (5/9)
- hardening off n. (5/9)
- car-fu n. (5/9)
- bump up suit n. (5/9)
- cat-claw n. (5/8)
- crabs in a bucket other. (5/8)
- poofer n. (5/8)
- peopletician n. (5/8)
- sandbox sailor n. (5/7)
- combat shower n. (5/7)
- sushi index n. (5/7)
- lake lettuce n. (5/7)
- ghost in v. phr. (5/7)
- head out v. phr. (5/7)
- sang n. (5/7)
- zebra striping n. (5/7)
- filler n. (5/6)
- winter soldier n. (5/6)
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