Why do spelling bees use such strange words β often foreign words that almost nobody uses? Like cymotrichous, stromuhr, Laodicean, guerdon, serrefine, and Ursprache? We answered that question in last weekβs episode β itβs what happens when one uses...
Is typing two spaces after a period βtotally, completely, utterly, and inarguably wrong?β Also, is the language of the movie True Grit historically accurate? Also, shut your pie-hole, Southern grammar, oh my Lady Gaga, and a little town called...
We have collective nouns for animals, like βa gaggle of geese,β βa pride of lions,β and βan exaltation of larks.β So why not collective nouns for plants? How about a βgreasing of palms,β or a βpursing of tulipsβ? Also, the difference between further...
βHome again, home again, jiggity-jig!β A listener wonders about the origin of this phrase her Mother often used. Grant and Martha trace it back to another mother: Mother Goose. The full line goes, βTo market, to market, to buy a fat pig, home again...
How much humor and personality can you pack into a 140-character update? A lot, it turns out. Martha and Grant talk about funny Twitter feeds. Also this week, the origins of skosh and βcanβt hold a candle,β why dragonflies are sometimes called snake...
Hi! In our latest episode: How do rules of grammar develop, anyway? What's "tarantula juice"? How did "boondoggle" come to mean "a waste of taxpayer money"? Plus, funny movie mistakes, and a new spin on the slang...

