All Verbal Energy
- Enron's gift to students of languageThe Texas energy giant鈥檚 record for largest corporate bankruptcy has long since been overtaken, but linguists will be feasting on the Enron e-mail dataset for years.
- Whither the subjunctive?Yes, language changes. But this old-fashioned verb mood is still useful when the voice of authority speaks.
- Ellipses that drive us dottyThe word for the path of the planets has a common ancestor with the term for the words that get left out.
- The nontrivial pursuits of summerA metaphor of three roads diverging 鈥 or converging 鈥 underlies a group of words describing what really matters, and what doesn鈥檛.
- So how fast is deliberately, anyway?Discussion around recent court decisions on gay marriage suggests that the pace of social change can be pretty swift.
- Awkwardness goes in the wrong directionThe story of a familiar word shows how words carry their history within them.
- Buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffaloA sentence consisting of a single word repeated multiple times shows the great flexibility of the English language.
- Scrolling through the history of the bookThe search to find out when bound books replaced scrolls leads to a new appreciation of why printed books still hold their own as a 鈥渉igh-tech鈥 format.
- The paradox of 'code'This hardworking monosyllable refers both to ways of making things known and ways of keeping them secret.
- A grammar issue I've just tuned in to 鈥 or into?A question from a dinner guest prompts a closer look at the nuances of 鈥榠nto鈥 and 鈥榠n to.鈥
- Grasping the idea of what it means to forgetA European court ruling upholds a Spaniard鈥檚 鈥榬ight to be forgotten.鈥
- 'Getting' and the constants of human natureThe simple word 鈥榞et鈥 gets around 鈥 even if it gets on some editors鈥 nerves.
- A wordsmith's garden of 'versus'A preposition that started out being quite confrontational has mellowed over time, to cover not just fights in court or the ring, but just ordinary comparisons
- Working it out with the algobotsHigh-frequency trading may be the hottest new thing on Wall Street, but the term for bots that make it happen has ancient roots.
- Big ideas in small talkA provocative bit of video considers the geographic variations in the questions people ask to take the measure of a stranger.
- I did not leave my original on the copierA document gone astray at tax time reminds the Monitor鈥檚 language columnist how technology has changed the distinctions between original and copy.
- Taxing taxonomies and 'the Chicken From Hell'A conversation with a vertebrate paleontologist reminds the Monitor's language columnist just how many nuances enter into the way we describe life-forms.
- Of oligarchs and plutocratsA look at the two much-used terms for the rich and powerful.
- The peripatetic copy editorMore drive time this winter has given the Monitor's language columnist time to think 鈥 and copy-edit her fellow travelers' signage.
- Dog-whistle editingWriters should be wary of 'rules' that draw a distinction without making a difference.