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Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report

par Susie Dent

Séries: The Language Report (2)

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This entirely new book covers all aspects of contemporary English as an evolving and mutating language. Slang, text, music, politics, idioms, and the media all contribute to changing the English we speak. This volume aims to chronicle this shapeshifting language over through its recenthistory, and particularly in 2004.A collection of some of the most intriguing facts and observations on spoken and written English today, this volume makes for excellent browsing. The fascinating development of euphemisms is covered, from sacking to halving the footprint, by way of making redundant and downsizing. New words are anessential part of this book, from the brand new 'intextication' to 'sexiles' and 'gangmasters'.Based on the authoritative research of the Oxford Language Programme, the biggest language research programme in the world, this volume brings completely fresh information to readers about the evolution of English in recent years, and in 2004 specifically.The Language Report examines the newest words in the language, and looks at the influence of current events, politics, and the media on everyday vocabulary, explains trends in grammar, and includes memorables quotes of the year.… (plus d'informations)
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If you’re interested enough in the English language to be spending your time reading a review of this book, you already know everything I’d normally put in the lead paragraph: that any language changes over time; that English – far from being an exception – is a premier example; and that writers and speakers of English are exuberant inventors, promiscuous borrowers, and shameless repurposers of words. Suffice it to say, then, that Larpers and Shroomers is a testament to all of that: A study of a language in the process of becoming, and a snapshot of what it looked like at a particular moment in time.

Larpers and Shroomers is one in a short-lived series of such annual snapshots, collectively titled (after the first one) “The Language Report.” It inventories new words and expressions from the worlds of computers, advertising, politics, teenage slang, and other fertile areas – documenting their meanings and the nuances attached to them, tracing their emergence, and inventorying their inventors (if known) and early adopters. Published by Oxford University Press -- the people who brought you the Oxford English Dictionary – it’s intended (and reads) as a serious attempt to document the evolution of English. Bright is, in effect, an anthropologist loose among British (and, to a lesser extent, American) users of English: Observing and recording, building a richly detailed mosaic of observations one carefully placed fact at a time.

The serious intent of the project doesn’t, however, mean that the execution is dull. Far from it. The cover design of the book is whimsical, the writing accessible, and the humor – present throughout the short chapters – subtle but abundant. Larpers and Shroomers is neither prescriptive (like William Safire’s On Language and its many sequels), nor interpretive (like Geoffrey Nunberg’s Going Nucular), but it offers similar pleasures to readers who’re fascinating by the richness and diversity of English. If you’re in that category, give Bright a try . . . and know that there are four more volumes where this one came from. ( )
  ABVR | Jan 2, 2013 |
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This entirely new book covers all aspects of contemporary English as an evolving and mutating language. Slang, text, music, politics, idioms, and the media all contribute to changing the English we speak. This volume aims to chronicle this shapeshifting language over through its recenthistory, and particularly in 2004.A collection of some of the most intriguing facts and observations on spoken and written English today, this volume makes for excellent browsing. The fascinating development of euphemisms is covered, from sacking to halving the footprint, by way of making redundant and downsizing. New words are anessential part of this book, from the brand new 'intextication' to 'sexiles' and 'gangmasters'.Based on the authoritative research of the Oxford Language Programme, the biggest language research programme in the world, this volume brings completely fresh information to readers about the evolution of English in recent years, and in 2004 specifically.The Language Report examines the newest words in the language, and looks at the influence of current events, politics, and the media on everyday vocabulary, explains trends in grammar, and includes memorables quotes of the year.

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