Ever been to an ABC party? How about a darty? The hosts discuss these and other slang terms heard around campus. They also talk about mulligrubs and collywobbles, take a shot at a puzzle for celebrity couples, potions that make childbirth a pleasure, and they check-up on old spelling bee champs. And to set the record straight, a preposition as a sentence-ender is something up with which we shall most definitely put!
This episode first aired October 1, 2011.
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ABC Party
What would you wear to an ABC party? Hint: the letters stand for "Anything But Clothes." Any guesses what you'd wear to a tight-and-bright party? Martha gives a taste of the college party terminology from a slang collection compiled by Penn State student Emily Grier.
Come With
Are you left hanging by the invitation "Do you want to come with?" A Milwaukee native is proud of this regionalism, which means "Do you want to come along?" Grant explains that it may be related to the German verb mitkommen, a single word that literally means to "come with."
Beautiful Silence
If what you're going to say isn't more beautiful than silence, don't say it. Martha shares this proverb, translated from the original Arabic.
Mollycobwobbles
you suffer from restless nights of tossing and turning, you may have a case of the mollycobwobbles. A listener shares this hand-me-down term from her grandmother. Grant explains she may well have combined two English terms dating about 150 years back: mulligrubs and collywobbles. The aptly named affliction usually consisted of the jitters, the shakes, or even the yips.
Punnet
That little basket that your strawberries and blueberries come in? It's called a punnet. Just so you know.
Odd Couples Word Puzzle
Quiz Guy Greg Pliska addles our brains with a puzzle called Odd Couples. See if you can figure out these strange celebrity pairings who share last names. "Anyone? Bueller, Bueller, Bueller" and "Bueller is Bueller is Bueller," for example, forms the odd couple of Ben and Gertrude Stein. And who else could hit home runs in the bedroom like Babe and Dr. Ruth?
Miracle-Potion Pitch
Looking for something that curls your hair, cleans your teeth, and makes childbirth a pleasure? A listener's mother used that saying in reference to every miracle potion from WD-40 to vinegar. Grant explains that the first known version of this in print dates back to 1919 in Mrs. Lucretia Graves' Exits from the Pearly Gates, where the advertisements for opium-type substances had less cheek and more sincerity. Grant notes that Google Books has a wealth of examples of old ads that took the saying and used even more elaborate versions to promote everything from tequila to hypnosis.
Boughten
Is boughten a past tense form of to buy? Grant gives his blessing to its use in informal conversation, but when it comes to formal writing, the word you want is bought.
Darty
What are the college kids up to these days? Apparently, they're busy at darties, or "day parties." Martha shares this collegiate portmanteau from Emily Grier's list.
Prepositions at the Ends of Sentences
Can sentences end with a preposition? Yes! Grant assures a listener that all experts, including the most conservative of linguists and lexicographers, agree that a preposition as the last word in a sentence is something up with which we shall put.
Monroe Piercing
Tell your Mom the sterling silver stud above your lip isn't "that dumb thing." It's called a Monroe piercing, in honor of Marilyn's famed beauty mark.
Spelling Bees
Though the Spanish language, among others, has its quirks and foreignisms, the English language really can't be touched when it comes to complicated and irregular spelling. Thus, spelling bees are primarily an English-language phenomenon. Grant mentions a few "where are they now?" stories about past Scripps Bee winners. The common thread? If these kids had the discipline to compete in such a high-pressure event, they tend to carry those traits beyond the spelling arena and into their successes later in life.
Mathematical
If something is mathematical, is it cool? According to a mother of two middle-schoolers, that's exactly what it's come to mean among the younger set. Then again, irony is also pretty hip. But could her kids be using a piece of ironic slang with confused sincerity? Ahh! Meta-irony! So cool!
His Balloon Has Lost Its String
If someone's balloon has lost its string, it means "they've come unmoored". Something unusual or odd has come about in their character. Patrice Evans used the illustration in his description of Tracy Morgan in an article for Grantland (no relation to our show's co-host).
Old Witticisms
He thinks he's a wit, and he's half right. Though some might attribute the quote to Shakespeare, it's nowhere to be found in the concordances. Grant explains how many of these witticisms have been tumbled about by old newspaper columnists, humorists, and vaudeville performers. Though their origins are muddled, they can still be a joy to hear and say.
Sentence-Initial So
So, can a sentence begin with the word so? Which ones? So is oftentimes used in place of therefore to conclude an explanation, but more people are using it as a general sentence-starter, in the same vein as well. Grant notes that while it may be grating to the ear, it's not wrong, and it's more productive not to peeve about it, but instead to record it and add it to the rest of the data we collect about our language. Ultimately, we learn about each other by doing so.
Boffin
Martha shares a British article that begins, "Boffins have discovered a strange new type of spongy mushroom." But what, you may ask, is a boffin? The word boffin denotes an intellectual with a specific expertise and general lack of social aptitude. Grant adds anorak to the list of terms for nerds with minimal aptitude for cocktail-party conversations. Here's to you, boffins and anoraks!
Photo by D Sharon Pruitt. Used under a Creative Commons license.
Book Mentioned in the Broadcast
Exits from the Pearly Gates by Lucretia Graves |
Music Used in the Broadcast
Title | Artist | Album | Label |
---|---|---|---|
Anger Management | Shawn Lee and Princess Superstar | Save The Music - A Compilation For Record Store Day | Ubiquity Records |
Taurus | Dennis Coffey | Goin' For Myself | Max Cat |
Impressions Of | Dennis Coffey | Evolution | Max Cat |
Oxygene (Part III) | Jean-Michel Jarre | Oxygene | Polydor |
Party Time | Roger Hamilton Spotts | Tongue Soundtrack | Chocolate Cities |
K-Jee | The Nite-Liters | Golden Classics | Collectables |
Astro Blue | Lord Newborn & The Magic Skulls | Lord Newborn & The Magic Skulls | Ubiquity Records |
Oxygene (Part IV) | Jean-Michel Jarre | Oxygene | Polydor |
Johnny's Gone To Vietnam | Cal Green | Johnny's Gone To Vietnam 45rpm | Mutt and Jeff Records |
You | Shirley Scott and The Soul Saxes | Shirley Scott and The Soul Saxes | Atlantic |
Trippin' | Cal Green | Trippin' 45rpm | Mutt and Jeff Records |
Let's Call The Whole Thing Off | Ella Fitzgerald | Ella Fitzgerald Sings the George & Ira Gershwin Song Book | UMG Recordings, Inc |
My favorite preposition-ended sentence has five of them at the end (so to speak).. "What did you bring that book that I wanted to be read to out of up for?"
The Adventure Time show is a quick, seven-minute mini-show and can be viewed online (link below, questionable legality) and within the first three minutes of the pilot episode, we hear, "Algebraic!" "Mathematical!" and "Columbus!" and the show can get a bit surreal in trying to move the story along quickly enough. "Hey! Sloppy Milkshake!" used as an insult was also a highlight =P
http://adventuretimeforfree.blogspot.com/2010/06/adventure-time-pilot.html
Grant's suggestion that someone's brain suspecting language as having developed a new trend after mentally isolating a pet peeve-ish variation in speaking, reminds me of how often you notice the kind of car you are driving, more than any other ordinary car — especially after newly purchasing one such car. After I randomly decided I hate the phrase "all but" to describe something as "nearly" or "almost entirely," I started hearing it *everywhere* although I'm sure it was just being used as frequently as it had been before. I've called it frequioception in that it's a perception of change in frequency regarding a topic. For instance: "Since I heard about colliwobbles on A Way With Words, I've experienced an increased frequioception of the word," or "I used to see Mazdas all over town when I drove one, but now that I'm driving a Ford pickup, I've experienced a decreased frequioception of Mazdas."
A blip on my language radar with increased frequioception lately has been the use of "of" as a replacement for the contracted 've. I was amazed to have seen it actually used in a Family Circus comic panel, for July 22, 2011, where little Billy says in the caption, "The Beacon Hill kids must of had a tough time skateboarding on THESE streets," when it should have been "must've" and I've seen a dozen plus people use "should of" and "would of" (some of them being college-age ESL students, though).. I'm curious as to how far back this trend reaches?
http://justcartoonsonly.blogspot.com/2011/07/family-circus-arcamax-publishing-family_2940.html
Another word I've invented is duoapostrophic (which, like frenquioception, is a double-dactyl (perhaps even triple) and has a 3 immediately consecutive vowels) which describes a contraction or otherwise displacement of letters in a word/phrase, that could be substituted by 2 apostrophes. The only duoapostrophic words I've come across so far, have been rural-style pronunciations of words, such as doe'n't (sounds like dudn't, for doesn't) and 'le'en (or possibly even 'le'em), for eleven. This opens the way for other words like multiapostrophic, trioapostrphic, quadroapostrophic, etc.
Love those made-up words! Very creative. I mentioned this in another thread, but I'll say it again here. The only word I ever actually made up was in response to a solicitation for new "sniglets" by SNL comedian Rich Hall back in the 80s. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sniglet .
Anyway, my sniglet was "geogoraphobic." It's meaning was "the tendency of whatever detail you're searching for in an atlas to be located at the seam between two pages." Never made it into print or SNL, but I always liked it.
ablestmage said:
A blip on my language radar with increased frequioception lately has been the use of "of" as a replacement for the contracted 've. I was amazed to have seen it actually used in a Family Circus comic panel, for July 22, 2011, where little Billy says in the caption, "The Beacon Hill kids must of had a tough time skateboarding on THESE streets," when it should have been "must've" and I've seen a dozen plus people use "should of" and "would of" (some of them being college-age ESL students, though).. I'm curious as to how far back this trend reaches?
I must of heard of for have all of my 56 years (although I rarely see it in print). (smiley)
Emmett
ablestmage said:
Another word I've invented is duoapostrophic (which, like frenquioception, is a double-dactyl (perhaps even triple) and has a 3 immediately consecutive vowels) which describes a contraction or otherwise displacement of letters in a word/phrase, that could be substituted by 2 apostrophes. The only duoapostrophic words I've come across so far, have been rural-style pronunciations of words, such as doe'n't (sounds like dudn't, for doesn't) and 'le'en (or possibly even 'le'em), for eleven. This opens the way for other words like multiapostrophic, trioapostrphic, quadroapostrophic, etc.
I trust you are aware of Kanye West's interruption of Taylor Swift receiving her Video Music Award that contained the classic line "I'm'a let you finish"?