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This week on "A Way with Words": What's in a name? A recent study found that some names crop up more frequently than others in certain professions. The name William is especially common among attorneys--and graphic designers include a higher-than-average number of Jessicas. Plus, picturesque idioms from around the world: What Russians mean when they say someone has "a burning hat," and what Swedes mean when they say someone "slid in on a shrimp sandwich." Speaking of food, where would you find a self-licking ice cream cone? A good place to look: Washington, D.C. Plus, bunking, Carter's got pills, the Philly slang word jawn, Irish tough love, do-ocracy, the pulmonic ingressive, and the etymology of tip.
FULL DETAILS
In English, we might say that someone born to a life of luxury was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. In Swedish, though, the image is different. Someone similarly spoiled is said to slide in on a shrimp sandwich. For more picturesque idioms from foreign languages, check out Suzanne Brock's beautifully illustrated Idiom's Delight.
Students in New England might refer to playing hooky from school as bunking, or bunking off. Jonathon Green's Dictionary of Slang traces the term back to the 1840s in the British Isles.
In Russian, someone with an uneasy conscience is described by an idiom that translates as The thief has a burning hat--perhaps because he's suffering discomfort that no one else perceives.
A Washington, D.C., caller says her dad would console her with the saying Don't worry, it will be better before you're married. Which is really less a heartfelt consolation than it is a better way to say, get over it. The saying comes from Ireland.
The terms self-licking ice cream cone, self-eating watermelon, and self-licking lollipop all refer to organizations, such as governmental bureaucracies, that appear to exist solely for the sake of perpetuating themselves.
Quiz Guy John Chaneski has a game where the answer to each clue is a word or phrase includes the vowels a, e, i, o, and u exactly one time each. For example, what's a cute infant animal that's yet to get its spikes?
Like many English words, tip—as in, the gratuity you leave to the waiter or the bellhop—doesn't originate with an acronym such as To Insure Promptness. This type of tip goes back to the mid-18th century, when thieves would tip, or tap, someone in the process of acquiring or handing off stolen goods. That false etymology really a backronym, formed after the invention of the word.
If you keep postponing an important chore, you're said to be procrastinating. There's a more colorful idiom in Portuguese, however. It translates as to push something with your belly.
Anyhow and anyways, said at the end of a sentence, are common placeholders that many find annoying. Instead, you might try finishing a thought with What do you think? That way, the conversation naturally flows back to the other person.
In Thailand, advice to the lovelorn can include a phrase that translates as The land is not so small as a prune leaf. It's the same sentiment as There are lots of fish in the sea.
The saying, you've got more excuses than Carter’s got pills, or more money than Carter’s got pills, refers to the very successful product known as Carter's Little Liver Pills. They were heavily marketed beginning in the late 1880's, and as late as 1961 made for some amusing television commercials.
Pangrams, or statements that include every letter of the alphabet, are collected on Twitter at @PangramTweets, and include such colorful lines as, I always feel like the clerk at the liquor store is judging me when she has to get a moving box to pack all my booze up.
The folks at the baby-name app Nametrix crunched some data and found that certain names are disproportionately represented in different professions. The name Leonard, for example, happens to be particularly common among geologists, and Marthas are overrepresented among interior designers.
In northern Sweden, the word yes is widely communicated by a sound that's reminiscent of someone sucking through a straw. It's called the pulmonic ingressive. Linguist Robert Eklund calls this a neglected universal, meaning that it's only recently been recognized as a sound that's part of many languages around the world, even though it's been around for a while. In one study, Swedes talking on the phone used ingressive speech when they thought they were speaking with a human, but not when they thought they were conveying the same information to a computer.
The Thai have a wise saying about self-reliance that translates as You must go to the restroom, the restroom won't come to find you. True that.
An Indianapolis listener is curious about a saying his dad used to describe anything that's excellent or the best of its kind: Just like New York.
The Occupy movement helped to popularize the term do-ocracy, a system of management or government where the people who actually roll up their sleeves and do things get to decide how those things are done.
Jawn is a term common in Philadelphia and parts of New Jersey that refers to a thing, team, show, group, or pretty much any item. It's a variant of joint, as in, a Spike Lee joint.
A Latvian expression that translates as Did a bear stomp on your ear? is a more colorful, though no more kind, way to tell someone they have no ear for music. Also heard in Latvia is an idiom that translates as You're blowing little ducks, meaning, "You're talking nonsense."
This episode was hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett.
--
A Way with Words is funded by its listeners: http://waywordradio.org/donate
Get your language question answered on the air! Call or write with your questions at any time:
Email: [email protected]
Phone:
United States and Canada toll-free (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673
London +44 20 7193 2113
Mexico City +52 55 8421 9771
Donate: http://waywordradio.org/donate
Site: http://waywordradio.org/
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Forums: http://waywordradio.org/discussion/
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Twitter: http://twitter.com/wayword/
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Copyright 2016, Wayword LLC.
By Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett. Produced by Stefanie Levine.4.6
21962,196 ratings
This week on "A Way with Words": What's in a name? A recent study found that some names crop up more frequently than others in certain professions. The name William is especially common among attorneys--and graphic designers include a higher-than-average number of Jessicas. Plus, picturesque idioms from around the world: What Russians mean when they say someone has "a burning hat," and what Swedes mean when they say someone "slid in on a shrimp sandwich." Speaking of food, where would you find a self-licking ice cream cone? A good place to look: Washington, D.C. Plus, bunking, Carter's got pills, the Philly slang word jawn, Irish tough love, do-ocracy, the pulmonic ingressive, and the etymology of tip.
FULL DETAILS
In English, we might say that someone born to a life of luxury was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. In Swedish, though, the image is different. Someone similarly spoiled is said to slide in on a shrimp sandwich. For more picturesque idioms from foreign languages, check out Suzanne Brock's beautifully illustrated Idiom's Delight.
Students in New England might refer to playing hooky from school as bunking, or bunking off. Jonathon Green's Dictionary of Slang traces the term back to the 1840s in the British Isles.
In Russian, someone with an uneasy conscience is described by an idiom that translates as The thief has a burning hat--perhaps because he's suffering discomfort that no one else perceives.
A Washington, D.C., caller says her dad would console her with the saying Don't worry, it will be better before you're married. Which is really less a heartfelt consolation than it is a better way to say, get over it. The saying comes from Ireland.
The terms self-licking ice cream cone, self-eating watermelon, and self-licking lollipop all refer to organizations, such as governmental bureaucracies, that appear to exist solely for the sake of perpetuating themselves.
Quiz Guy John Chaneski has a game where the answer to each clue is a word or phrase includes the vowels a, e, i, o, and u exactly one time each. For example, what's a cute infant animal that's yet to get its spikes?
Like many English words, tip—as in, the gratuity you leave to the waiter or the bellhop—doesn't originate with an acronym such as To Insure Promptness. This type of tip goes back to the mid-18th century, when thieves would tip, or tap, someone in the process of acquiring or handing off stolen goods. That false etymology really a backronym, formed after the invention of the word.
If you keep postponing an important chore, you're said to be procrastinating. There's a more colorful idiom in Portuguese, however. It translates as to push something with your belly.
Anyhow and anyways, said at the end of a sentence, are common placeholders that many find annoying. Instead, you might try finishing a thought with What do you think? That way, the conversation naturally flows back to the other person.
In Thailand, advice to the lovelorn can include a phrase that translates as The land is not so small as a prune leaf. It's the same sentiment as There are lots of fish in the sea.
The saying, you've got more excuses than Carter’s got pills, or more money than Carter’s got pills, refers to the very successful product known as Carter's Little Liver Pills. They were heavily marketed beginning in the late 1880's, and as late as 1961 made for some amusing television commercials.
Pangrams, or statements that include every letter of the alphabet, are collected on Twitter at @PangramTweets, and include such colorful lines as, I always feel like the clerk at the liquor store is judging me when she has to get a moving box to pack all my booze up.
The folks at the baby-name app Nametrix crunched some data and found that certain names are disproportionately represented in different professions. The name Leonard, for example, happens to be particularly common among geologists, and Marthas are overrepresented among interior designers.
In northern Sweden, the word yes is widely communicated by a sound that's reminiscent of someone sucking through a straw. It's called the pulmonic ingressive. Linguist Robert Eklund calls this a neglected universal, meaning that it's only recently been recognized as a sound that's part of many languages around the world, even though it's been around for a while. In one study, Swedes talking on the phone used ingressive speech when they thought they were speaking with a human, but not when they thought they were conveying the same information to a computer.
The Thai have a wise saying about self-reliance that translates as You must go to the restroom, the restroom won't come to find you. True that.
An Indianapolis listener is curious about a saying his dad used to describe anything that's excellent or the best of its kind: Just like New York.
The Occupy movement helped to popularize the term do-ocracy, a system of management or government where the people who actually roll up their sleeves and do things get to decide how those things are done.
Jawn is a term common in Philadelphia and parts of New Jersey that refers to a thing, team, show, group, or pretty much any item. It's a variant of joint, as in, a Spike Lee joint.
A Latvian expression that translates as Did a bear stomp on your ear? is a more colorful, though no more kind, way to tell someone they have no ear for music. Also heard in Latvia is an idiom that translates as You're blowing little ducks, meaning, "You're talking nonsense."
This episode was hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett.
--
A Way with Words is funded by its listeners: http://waywordradio.org/donate
Get your language question answered on the air! Call or write with your questions at any time:
Email: [email protected]
Phone:
United States and Canada toll-free (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673
London +44 20 7193 2113
Mexico City +52 55 8421 9771
Donate: http://waywordradio.org/donate
Site: http://waywordradio.org/
Podcast: http://waywordradio.org/podcast/
Forums: http://waywordradio.org/discussion/
Newsletter: http://waywordradio.org/newsletter/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/wayword/
Skype: skype://waywordradio
Copyright 2016, Wayword LLC.

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