11 July 2011
Sunday Funnies: SMBC & Thesauri
Video Tuesday: History of English in Ten Minutes
28 June 2011
An amusing series of videos.
Of course, it’s superficial and simplistic, but essentially correct. I can’t find a site where these are all located for easy reference, but clicking around YouTube will get you all ten without too much trouble.
(Hat tip to Mr. Verb)
Update: Metafilter has linked all ten videos.
30 Harshest Author-on-Author Insults in History
21 June 2011
These are definitely quite harsh, and I don’t agree with most of them. (Although Wilde was dead on when he said, “There are two ways of disliking poetry; one way is to dislike it, the other is to read Pope.")
One caveat: I am very skeptical of quotes found on the internet. They usually are found to have been invented after the fact. I haven’t verified any of these. (One good sign, though, is that all of them have dates attached, which hints that someone did actual research to verify them.) But even if some turn out to be fake, they’re still fun.
(Tip o’ the hat to AnotherPhD2B’s Twitter feed)
Dictionaries & SCOTUS
14 June 2011
The New York Times has an article on how the US Supreme Court is using dictionaries more than ever in formulating their decisions.
I’m not sure that I agree with Jesse Sheidlower’s nearly categorical assessment that this is a bad thing. While the trend is disturbing and the justices do not appear to have a good grasp on exactly what a dictionary can be reliably used for, there are situations where its use would be appropriate. I can envision instances where a judge might want to look to see if a common word had particular connotations or nuances that might impact the meaning, and there is the use of historical dictionaries to understand what previous generations may have been trying to say. Still, I heartily agree that the words in most pieces of legislation are not amenable to decoding using the dictionary.