All In a Word
- Bending over backward to be wrongAs the term 'prestige construction' hints, hypercorrection is intimately bound up with issues of social class.
- When words get 鈥榞irl cooties鈥A word that starts out as a neutral or even positive term for men聽feminizes聽(becomes exclusively identified with women) and often聽pejorates聽(gets worse).
- Where did all the hoydens go?It is hard even to imagine聽hoyden聽as a meaningful term of reproach and criticism today. Why shouldn鈥檛 girls climb trees? What鈥檚 wrong with women laughing loudly and saying what they think?
- Can the punniest also be the funniest?Why, as John Pollack writes in 鈥淭he Pun Also Rises,鈥 do we consider puns 鈥渢he lowest form of humor?鈥
- Must Dennis be a dentist?A group of psychologists recently published a paper claiming that nominative determinism actually works. They found that men named Dennis were more likely to be dentists, the theory being that 'people choose 鈥 or are unconsciously drawn to 鈥 careers that resemble their own names.'
- Can comity and Comey coexist?The US Senate is 鈥 or was 鈥 strongly associated with ideals of comity. Many of the recent articles about former FBI Director James Comey, however, suggest that Senate comity is under threat or already destroyed.聽聽 聽
- Exactly how often is that?Even if you decide to make a firm distinction between聽bi-聽and聽semi-, these words are used so interchangeably that it鈥檚 still confusing.
- When plump was a pleasing wordIt was only at the turn of the 20th century that a high enough proportion of Westerners had so much food that thinness resulting from self-denial became the standard of beauty.聽
- You say pitato 鈥As a result of technology and the prevalence of social media, we are now seeing a return to much earlier attitudes about spelling. The criterion then was simple: If people understood you, you were spelling it right.
- From one word lover to anotherI never met Ruth Walker in person, but I felt I got to know her.