According to Gobsmacked: The British Invasion of American English (Bookshop|Amazon) by Ben Yagoda, the word smarmy, meaning βunctuousβ or βingratiating,β may come from a 19th-century magazine contest, in which readers sent in made-up words such as...
Ben Yagodaβs new book Gobsmacked: The British Invasion of American English, based on his blog Not One-Off Britishisms, which features words and phrases that are originally British but are being used more and more in the States, including cushy...
How hot is it? Well, poet Dylan Thomas found lots of memorable ways to describe a heat wave. In one letter to a friend, he wrote that it was so hot βMy brains are hanging out like a dogβs tongue.β And: pestering country music stars for selfies is a...
The liked to in statements such as It started raining yesterday and liked to never stop is directly related to the word likely. The terms liked to and likedta used in this way reflect a British dialectal term that found its way into the speech of...
In the U.S. the verb mooch means βto get something without paying for it.β In the UK, mooch means βwindow shopping.β Linguist Lynne Murphy writes about this and other differences in her helpful blog, Separated by a Common Language. This is part of a...
Elijah is from Fayetteville, West Virginia, and wonders why he talks differently from the way his peers from the same area of Appalachia talk. What causes someone to develop a particular accent? Two great resources for information about the...

