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The Growlery
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In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni. 09:10 am April 15th, 2013. Language and Societies abstracts, vol. 5 (2013). The students in the 2013 edition of my Language and Societies. Heather Buza: An Analysis of Driving Contracts for Persons with Dementia. Darlene Pennington-Johnson: The Verbal Art of Bribery: Going Further than Detroit’s Front Door. Stephen Teran: Aviation English and Communication Problems. Hind Ababtain: Saudi Arabic Diglossia and Code-Switching in Twitter: Education and Gender Effect.
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A feisty embuggerance | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/2009/10/21/a-feisty-embuggerance
Embuggerance, E., and H. Feisty. 2008. The linguistics of laughter. English Today. 1, no 04: 47-47. After I stopped laughing, I set to figuring out what was going on. 1) I quickly discarded the theory that an unlikely duo of scholars actually had this pair of names – although that would have been too awesome for words. In fact, no other article listed in Google Scholar. Has an author named ‘Embuggerance’ (although there are a couple other Feistys. By Walter Nash. It’s perfectly ordinary and non...Krasis,...
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Lexiculture | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/lexiculture
Are an open-access collection of student scholarship on the relationship between modern English words and their historical and social contexts. The papers represent original research using methods and approaches from linguistic anthropology, dialectology, corpus linguistics, historical sociolinguistics, and cultural studies. The goal of the project is to demonstrate the viability of student-directed research on words that is both rigorous and accessible. And all the papers are housed here at Glossographia.
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Mandarin vs. Cantonese in America | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/2009/10/21/mandarin-vs-cantonese-this-time-its-interpersonal
Mandarin vs. Cantonese in America. There’s an interesting article. Well, it looks like the positive aspect of this is that in these cases Mandarin isn’t so much supplanting Cantonese as it is supplementing it. Even if the overall proportion of Cantonese speakers to Mandarin speakers suffers, children are gaining an invaluable third system of insight into thought and into the world, when most children in the US have to settle for a single, insular tongue. Nice blog I’ll be back! October 22, 2009 at 6:10 am.
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Still embuggered up | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/2015/02/02/still-embuggered-up
Over five years ago, I published what was (for a long time) to be my most popular post here at Glossographia, A feisty embuggerance. In which I described in the wild a particularly bizarre sort of optical character recognition error that found its way into Google Scholar’s metadata, resulting in an otherwise ordinary paper authored by the unlikely duo of Escalate Embuggerance and Holistic Feisty (Embuggerance and Feisty 1985). After the folks at Language Log. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. February 2, 2015.
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Where I’ve been (and will continue to be) | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/2015/04/24/where-ive-been-and-will-continue-to-be
Where I’ve been (and will continue to be). Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. April 24, 2015.
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Why adjunct labor matters to all of us | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/2015/02/25/why-adjunct-labor-matters-to-all-of-us
Why adjunct labor matters to all of us. Today is National Adjunct Walkout Day. And if National Anthropology Day (from my last post) is not going to become a statutory holiday, you can be doubly sure that this one won’t either. It has come about in order to raise awareness of and provoke action against a serious problem: the working conditions of adjunct faculty in academia. Along with organizations like the New Faculty Majority. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details be...
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schrisomalis | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/author/schrisomalis
Drinks by the jillion. My most recent publication, ‘ Umpteen reflections on indefinite hyperbolic numerals. 91(1), 1-33) defines and discusses a category of words: indefinite hyperbolic numerals. These are words like. Which look and act like numerals, but don’t have a definite numerical meaning: they’re always indefinite, and almost always refer to some exaggerated quantity. One of my main arguments is that while we think of words ending in. As random alterations of the first consonant of. Wichita had (a...
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Language and Societies abstracts, vol. 7 (2015) | Glossographia
https://glossographia.wordpress.com/2015/04/06/language-and-societies-abstracts-vol-7-2015
Language and Societies abstracts, vol. 7 (2015). The abstracts below are summaries of papers by junior scholars from the 2015 edition of my course,. And presented at the course blog. Kat Slocum: Greensky Hill Native American Methodist Church: the role of language in group identity. Nicole Lopinski: ‘The Hobbit’: An Analysis of Popular Media Portrayal of. Kimberly Oliver: Voodoo in Popular Music: Linguistic Semantics’ Influence on Identity and Stereotype Formation. Jaroslava Maria Pallas: From Little Acor...