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- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 14:36:57 HST
- Sender: English Language Discussion Group <WORDS-L@uga.cc.uga.edu>
- From: Michael Macmillan <mmac@PEGASUS.COM>
- Subject: Oxford Companion
- Comments: To: words-l@uga.cc.uga.edu
- Lines: 35
-
- One of my Christmas acquisitions is an interesting compendium of things
- titled _The Oxford Companion to the English Language_, edited by
- Tom McArthur (Oxford University Press, 1992).
-
- Just browsing through, my eye falls on many interesting things, for
- example, the unfamiliar to me term amphiboly. I see it every day but
- didn't know what to call it: ambiguity caused by lack of grammatical
- clarity in which a phrase or sentence can be understood in two ways.
- The example given is "the shooting of the hunters."
-
- There is a considerable discussion of BBC English and a lot on
- dialect. Alas, nothing I can see on Cincinnati dialect.
-
- Here's an interesting item on "blue-eyed English." This will probably
- pop up in Carolyn's version of Trivial Pursuit. Blue-eyed English, it
- seems, is the name given to Percy Grainger's attempts to use English
- without its Latinate element. An example, quoted from John Bird's
- biography of Grainger: "Nothing should be done for take-it-easy,
- know-nothing & care-less keyed-hammer-string players. We tone-wrights
- should be-shame them all we can."
-
- The very next item tells me that the term blurb was coined in 1907
- y Frank Gelett Burgess to describe a comic-book jacket he had created.
- The design included "a sexy young woman whom he called Miss Blinda Blurb.
-
- One more item. There is an entry under "Scottish Joke." These jokes
- present Scots as "undeemably mean." The example given: "Whilst in
- London's West End tonight, a Scotsman died of starvation on the back
- seat of a Pay-as-You-Leave bus."
-
- Merry Christmas, GT.
-
- ----------------
- Michael E. Macmillan
- (mmac@pegasus.com)
-