1 April 2010
Geoff Nunberg has a great radio essay on the Pledge of Allegiance over at NPR. If you’re interested in one linguist’s take on the meaning of “under God” in the pledge, it’s well worth a look.
(Hat tip to Jan Freeman)
1 April 2010
Geoff Nunberg has a great radio essay on the Pledge of Allegiance over at NPR. If you’re interested in one linguist’s take on the meaning of “under God” in the pledge, it’s well worth a look.
(Hat tip to Jan Freeman)
28 March 2010
Okay, this has nothing to do with language or word origins, but it is an example of the pitfalls one can encounter when dipping your toes into areas about which you know little and why having a “Ph.D.” after your name doesn’t necessarily mean that you know what you’re talking about. And it’s about things medieval, which piques my fancy.
Brian Wansink, the John S. Dyson Professor of Applied Economics at Cornell University, and his brother Craig Wansink, a religious studies professor at Virginia Wesleyan College, have written an article on the growing size of food portions in depictions of Christ’s Last Supper over the centuries. Brian Wansink gives a summary in the Atlantic. Evidently, the Wansinks have determined that the relative size of the portions in artistic representations of the Last Supper have grown over the last 2,000 years and this has some sort of relevance to modern rates of obesity.
But Carl S. Pyrdum over at the Got Medieval blog does a fairly effective take down of how the Wansinks’ methodology is utterly wrong headed. The Wansinks really should have consulted someone with a smattering of knowledge of art history.
Update: The Onion puts in its two cents..
(Hat tip to Andrew Sullivan’s Daily Dish)
24 March 2010
An excellent post over at the Motivated Grammar blog on why linguists object to most prescriptivism.
20 March 2010
This ad, prepared for DK Books, is a very clever use of language:
The concept, however, is not original. It dates back to an Argentinian political ad from 2005. (Why the ad is in English, I have no idea.)
(Hat tip to Andrew Sullivan’s The Daily Dish)
11 March 2010
Linguist and lexicographer Ben Zimmer has been named the On Language columnist, succeeding William Safire. Details are here.
It’s well deserved and I couldn’t think of a better choice.
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