Good news! America’s master wordsmith strikes again with a new collection of erudite, witty, provocative, sometimes barbed, frequently hilarious “On Language” columns. Published in The New York Times and syndicated in more than three hundred other newspapers, these opinions from the “Supreme Court of Current English Usage” cover everything from the bottom line on tycoonese and the accesses* of computerese to portmanteau words like televangelist and Draconomics (the language maven’s own plan for our bloated economy). Although Safire makes an admirable case for adverbs and adjectives, advocates of strong verbs will be heartened to hear that he also: pleads for the preservation of the subjunctive mood; delivers, hot off the college campus, the latest lingo in which ‘rents means parents and yesterday’s wimps are today’s squids; decries the brevity-is-next-to-godliness literary school; bids farewell to anxiety (it’s been replaced by trendy stress or swangst); noodles over such weighty geopolitical questions as “when an intercept of a fighter is a buzz”; bemoans the loss of roughage to fiber; and rides herd over the language spoken in Marlboro Country. More good news! Safire again spices his own wit and wisdom with correspondence from Lexicographic irregulars, those zealous readers and letter writers who reply to his columns with praise, scorn, corrections and nitpicks—anything to match wits with Super-maven. If You Could Look It Up and Take My Word for It occupy prominent spots in your bookcase, then Language Maven Strikes Again belongs there too. If they don’t, then begin with this Safire and work your way back. *That’s not a typo—that’s a pun.
Elizabeth M. Fowler wrote in The New York Times on June 11, 1966: “Mr. Neill, who calls himself a contrarian, which means he tends to act just the opposite of the crowd or general public, now advises caution.
The word munchkin, meaning “a small person, dwarf, or elf,” derives from the Munchkins, a dwarfish people in L. Frank Baum's 1900 book, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and was popularized by the book's 1939 film version, The Wizard of Oz..
... as does “it has,” and “we (have) got” also matches plural subject with verb. Few people would argue with the agreeable didactives above. Now let's get into agreement trouble. Here is a note from J. Bennett Johnston, Senator from ...
It was further popularized by the journalist William Safire , who called himself a “ language maven " and entitled two of his books Language Maven Strikes Again ( 1990 ) and Quoth the Maven ( 1993 ) . The word came from Yiddish meyvn ...
... isn't well placed—e.g.: “e dungeon is the center of a debate over not the effectiveness of pedagogic hard labor but the race of the punished and the race of the punishers.” Jon D. Hull, “Do Teachers Punish According to Race?
Darrell , 293 Berger , Samuel R. , 101–2 Berger , Thomas , 106 Bergmann , Rolf , 286 Berke , Richard L. , 119 Berkeley ... 73 Brody , Evelyn , 270 Brooks , Mel , 154 Brown , Frank C. , 46 Brown , Jerry , 42 Brown , Kathi Ann , 155 Brown ...
"Phil Donahue . . . pronounces controversial as 'contro-ver-seeul,' rather than 'controvershul.' ... In the same way, elitist newscasters knock the 'she' out of negotiate in their chichi pronunciation, 'nego-see-ations.
This basic grammar book highlights fifty mock rules, each using the mistake it purports to correct, such as the "Passive voice should never be used" and "A writer must not shift your point of view."
OTHER BOOKS BY WILLIAM SAFIRE LANGUAGE ON LANGUAGE IN LOVE WITH NORMA LOQUENDI QUOTH THE MAVEN COMING TO TERMS FUMBLERULES LANGUAGE MAVEN STRIKES AGAIN YOU COULD LOOK IT UP TAKE MY WORD FOR IT I STAND CORRECTED WHAT'S THE GOOD WORD ?
The word derives from the Latin understood in a derogatory sense ; those who do verb inchoare “ to hitch with ; to begin . ” Yet , betend to use a phrase such as ethical wall . cause it was misunderstood as being a negative In conflict ...