All Verbal Energy
- We set off to find the elusive pilcrowWhat do you call that little mark that indicates the start of a new paragraph, anyway?
- Is the paragraph an endangered species?As humanity鈥檚 global attention span seems to shrink relentlessly, what does this mean for this essential unit of prose?
- Getting to the point with pencilsWe don鈥檛 have hard data on this, but even in the Digital Age, the humble graphite pencil continues to make its mark.
- Secrets of champion spellers revealedAs the excitement over this year鈥檚 National Spelling Bee builds, a look at what orthographic advice the best contestants have for the rest of us.
- Has pristine lost its innocence?A look at how a word that started off meaning 鈥榓ncient鈥 or 鈥榦riginal鈥 has come to mean brand new.鈥
- Still more to know about 鈥榶eah, no鈥Did you know that English used to have not just two but four words for 鈥榶es鈥 and 鈥榥o鈥?
- Hearing 鈥榊es, no, totally鈥 鈥 in the wildThe Monitor鈥檚 language columnist is at first skeptical of the idea that people say 鈥榥o鈥 as a way to say 鈥榶es.鈥
- Judicious application of the comma shakerA look at a witty new memoir from a longtime copy editor at The New Yorker.
- Right in our wheelhouse, wherever it isIdioms enrich our language with the word pictures they suggest, but they work best when we understand the concrete images behind them.
- The (salty) secret life of salamiTerms for several very different food items share a common 'salty' origin, but one has moved on to provide a metaphor for incrementalism.
- Semantic bleaching, in your own kitchenThe flowers in your vase are more closely related to the flour in your cupboard than you may realize.
- Spring gets a hearty, not hardy, welcomeA look at two words of different backgrounds that cover some of the same ground.
- Politics, policy, and the nuances betweenBenjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 speech before Congress was a reminder of just how politicized the word 鈥榩olitical鈥 has become.
- Verbs with a past tense already built inWhile the roast(ed) potatoes are in the oven, the Monitor鈥檚 language columnist ponders some irregularities and oddities of verbs.
- Like the Gal谩pagos, only for linguistsA look at the curious history of St. Barths, Caribbean glamour destination but also a living laboratory for linguists.
- Boston鈥檚 solid deal on its snow farmAs Boston struggles to haul off its accumulation of white stuff, a new understanding of just what a 鈥榝arm鈥 is emerges.
- In search of new words for new media?Is a 鈥榤ovie鈥 still a movie if you watch it on your phone?
- A computational linguist reads the menuDan Jurafsky of Stanford explains how menu prose aligns with prices, and ensures that you鈥檒l never look at 鈥榗hef鈥檚 choice鈥 the same way again.
- History of the world in a ketchup bottleStanford linguist Dan Jurafsky doesn鈥檛 just explain the origins of the word for the red sauce we slather on 鈥楩rench鈥 fries; he uses the global ketchup trade as evidence for a new understanding of global economic history.
- A curmudgeon鈥檚 guide to new usagesA traditionalist offers a framing question: Does this new usage solve a new problem?