
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


What word or phrase conjures immediate understanding in your family — but puzzled looks from everyone else?
In one family, pizza crust is known as “pizza bones.” In another, children who weren’t allowed to say fart were instructed to use the word “foof” instead.
This Thursday, MPR News host Kerri Miller talked about “familect” with word wizard Anatoly Liberman.
Guest:
Anatoly Liberman is a linguist and professor of languages at the University of Minnesota. His latest book is, “Take My Word For It: A Dictionary of English Idioms.”
Subscribe to the MPR News with Kerri Miller podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or RSS.
By Minnesota Public Radio4.6
121121 ratings
What word or phrase conjures immediate understanding in your family — but puzzled looks from everyone else?
In one family, pizza crust is known as “pizza bones.” In another, children who weren’t allowed to say fart were instructed to use the word “foof” instead.
This Thursday, MPR News host Kerri Miller talked about “familect” with word wizard Anatoly Liberman.
Guest:
Anatoly Liberman is a linguist and professor of languages at the University of Minnesota. His latest book is, “Take My Word For It: A Dictionary of English Idioms.”
Subscribe to the MPR News with Kerri Miller podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or RSS.

91,289 Listeners

38,450 Listeners

6,917 Listeners

38,917 Listeners

9,230 Listeners

4,031 Listeners

574 Listeners

182 Listeners

200 Listeners

246 Listeners

79 Listeners

216 Listeners

87 Listeners

26 Listeners

41 Listeners

4,701 Listeners

113,434 Listeners

9,110 Listeners

6,461 Listeners

11,011 Listeners

1,610 Listeners

6,287 Listeners

4,482 Listeners