Home » Discussion Forum—A Way with Words, a fun radio show and podcast about language

Discussion Forum—A Way with Words, a fun radio show and podcast about language

A Way with Words, a radio show and podcast about language and linguistics.

Discussion Forum (Archived)

Please consider registering
Guest
Forum Scope


Match



Forum Options



Min search length: 3 characters / Max search length: 84 characters
The forums are currently locked and only available for read only access
sp_TopicIcon
Linguistic anachronisms in the movies
Ron Draney
721 Posts
(Offline)
1
2009/05/12 - 9:40am

I recently saw the movie "Changeling", starring Angeline Jolie and directed by Clint Eastwood, and a couple of bits of vocabulary caught my attention. I thought I'd run them everyone and see if I'm completely off the mark.

1. Jolie's character tells her son, in a scene set in 1928, that he can find milk and a sandwich "in the fridge". I've done a little research and found that true refrigerators did exist as early as 1915, but it's the slang term that bothers me; I'm thinking she should have said "in the icebox". (That, by the way, is the spelling of the word in the SDH captions; some have suggested that early adopters would have written it "frig".)

2. In a later scene set in 1930, a police officer refers to a "serial killer". While such people have certainly existed for centuries, I don't recall hearing this particular phrase used before about 1970.

Fascinating movie, by the way.

Grant Barrett
San Diego, California
1532 Posts
(Offline)
2
2009/05/12 - 10:08am

"Fridge" did exist at least as early as 1926, according to my dictionaries. You're probably right about "serial killer." Brief searching turns up nothing concrete before the 1980s.

Guest
3
2009/05/12 - 4:55pm

I just wondering how many period movies there are in which a gay person is described as “gay” or “queer” before those words were connected to homosexuality (or in which someone is referred to as “homosexual” before the concept of sexual orientation existed). I'm sure that I've probably seen at least one or two, but I can't think of any off the top of my head.

Guest
4
2009/05/14 - 4:36pm

It happens all the time that writers are not aware of historical matters. I believe it was Mr Shakespeare himself who had the Romans eating tomatoes in the days of the Empire. He was probably not aware that tomatoes only grew in Europe after the discovery of the New World.

Forum Timezone: UTC -7
Show Stats
Administrators:
Martha Barnette
Grant Barrett
Moderators:
Grant Barrett
Top Posters:
Newest Members:
A Conversation with Dr Astein Osei
Forum Stats:
Groups: 1
Forums: 1
Topics: 3647
Posts: 18912

 

Member Stats:
Guest Posters: 618
Members: 1268
Moderators: 1
Admins: 2
Most Users Ever Online: 1147
Currently Online:
Guest(s) 95
Currently Browsing this Page:
1 Guest(s)

Recent posts