All Verbal Energy
- Yeoman service far afield, even at seaA look at a go-to metaphor for headline writers: Who are yeomen, anyway?
- Spring cleaning for the odd-words drawerWe take a look at some fossils 鈥 words that live on in just a single idiom.
- A new crash program on safetyActivists are reframing the terms of public debate by refusing to call road deaths 鈥榓ccidents鈥 鈥 and they鈥檝e gotten the attention of The Associated Press.
- Rebranding the Czech Republic: CzechiaSimplification of European place names continues as Prague government adopts a one-word name for the country.
- The Panama Papers: losing our inflectionsWhile others sort out the legal and political implications, the Monitor鈥檚 language columnist has her eye on what the megaleak means for adjectives.
- Crowdsourcing the language of well-beingA psychologist seeks to enrich the emotional landscape of English speakers by introducing them to 216 鈥渦ntranslatable鈥 foreign words
- Spikes in the price of other kinds of oilA look at oil metaphors in the lexicon of political put-downs 鈥 and food.
- Goodbye, SAT words; hello, Tier Two wordsA look at the College Board鈥檚 new approach to testing vocabulary.
- Can you have engineering with no engine?Engineering is all around us, but let鈥檚 not forget its warlike roots.
- Adieu to the grammar nerd in the black robeIn language as in law, Antonin Scalia showed a welcome capacity for collaboration and friendship across ideological divides.
- Democracy, the people, and their thingsA look at the metaphors behind the names of parliaments
- Have we all turned into 鈥榚ditors鈥 now?When British scientists get approval to 鈥榚dit鈥 human genes, it鈥檚 clear the verb has slipped its moorings in the world of publishing.
- Many lanes on the road to the White HouseRemember the old days, when political parties had 鈥榳ings鈥?
- Charged up by what I know about batteriesWhen Benjamin Franklin needed a name for his device for storing electricity, he borrowed a military term.
- The 800 phonemes of the tiniest linguistsNew research helps explain how infants acquire language skills 鈥 by losing their ability to discriminate sounds they don鈥檛 need.
- Forever Anbar, or is that maybe ambergris?A friend鈥檚 question about possible connections between a couple of sound-alike words serves as a reminder that with words, just as with people, some that appear closely related, aren鈥檛, and others that don鈥檛, are.
- Of hockey sticks and other graphic termsA chart may be worth a thousand words, but graphics give rise to some useful idioms.
- What we might have done insteadA revisiting of history on the presidential campaign trail provides an occasion for reviewing may and might.
- Word treasures going at fire-sale prices!The Monitor鈥檚 language columnist is loath to argue against usefulness as a criterion for the vocabulary high-schoolers should acquire; but 鈥榦bscure鈥 words may be the spices in our verbal stew.
- 'Peaking' into the future of climate changeA phrase coming out of the Paris conference acknowledges subtly a sense of responsibility for greenhouse gas emissions.