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PublishedMarch 14, 2021
In a word: Unpresidented array of media miscues
If the president's wife is the First Lady, then wouldn't that make the veep's hubby the Second Gentleman?
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PublishedMarch 7, 2021
In a word: That all sounds so foreign to me
In Italy I fancied myself one of the cognoscenti (people in the know), and was living la dolce vita (the sweet life).
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PublishedFebruary 28, 2021
In a word: ‘Grams’ — the Russian nesting dolls of language
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PublishedFebruary 21, 2021
In a word: Know your nyms — words that describe words
Back when Mr. Leon Leonwood Bean was building his business in Freeport, the lumber dealer in town was Mr. Woodman, making his name an aptronym, or a name that's appropriate for the type of work one does.
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PublishedFebruary 14, 2021
In a word: Ways for describing the passage of time
The Buick Century, a car model manufactured on and off since 1936, was so named because it could hit 100 miles per hour back in the day.
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PublishedFebruary 7, 2021
In a word: Computer culture gives common words a reboot
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PublishedJanuary 31, 2021
In a word: ‘Murder,’ ‘enormity’ and other words in the news
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PublishedJanuary 24, 2021
In a word: Using slang makes you part of the gang
By the '80s everything was totally tubular. I had a great place with a bodacious view where I could hang loose.
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PublishedJanuary 17, 2021
In a word: The phonetic alphabet and the silent treatment
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PublishedJanuary 10, 2021
In a word: Consider the longsuffering, fastvanishing hyphen
It's been praised, vilified and most recently banished. The little hyphen's future seems illfated despite having made a lot of connections over the years.
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