tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post557578745535557516..comments2024-03-28T07:47:45.855+00:00Comments on Separated by a Common Language: Words of the Year nominations? lynneguisthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10171345732985610861noreply@blogger.comBlogger34125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-22696527951391609272015-12-14T07:16:03.912+00:002015-12-14T07:16:03.912+00:00Seniors (as in the book iPhone for Seniors)
Seniors (as in the book iPhone for Seniors)<br />Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04742350786158708379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-43038918612015407032015-12-14T07:12:57.984+00:002015-12-14T07:12:57.984+00:00Another TV one - aired (instead of broadcast or sh...Another TV one - aired (instead of broadcast or shown)Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04742350786158708379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-43480621438985650332015-12-09T13:21:02.804+00:002015-12-09T13:21:02.804+00:00Season (as in TV season), instead of series.Season (as in TV season), instead of series.Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04742350786158708379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-12681045906753565782015-12-09T12:33:04.937+00:002015-12-09T12:33:04.937+00:00For US-UK, I'd very much back up Anonymous'...For US-UK, I'd very much back up Anonymous's suggestion of mac and cheese (or possibly mac 'n' cheese). It's definitely a US term, and it's definitely beginning to push out the UK equivalent.<br /><br />It's also very much a phenomenon of the moment. This obviously isn't just a linguistic thing, but many more places are serving mac and cheese now than would have done so a couple of years ago. You can tell it's going mainstream when Pret a Manger jumps on the bandwagon - they started serving it in October 2014. (Though, to be fair, they still call it macaroni cheese).Simon Knoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-74473781574958290262015-12-09T11:54:36.940+00:002015-12-09T11:54:36.940+00:00For US-to-UK WotY I nominate "safe space"...For US-to-UK WotY I nominate "safe space". Here's Ben Zimmer on the <a href="http://www.wsj.com/articles/roots-of-the-safe-space-controversy-1447429433" rel="nofollow">roots of the term</a>, all of the citations from the US. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07531442194967865426noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-7306286179688566532015-12-09T11:41:29.898+00:002015-12-09T11:41:29.898+00:00This comment has been removed by the author.Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04742350786158708379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-42481374589766526142015-12-09T11:41:00.145+00:002015-12-09T11:41:00.145+00:00"Netflix and chill"<br />"Netflix and chill"Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04742350786158708379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-26584186326362479562015-11-25T23:55:14.620+00:002015-11-25T23:55:14.620+00:00a 1032 novel
Sorry! The novel was published in 19...<i>a 1032 novel</i><br /><br />Sorry! The novel was published in 1932.David Crosbiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01858358459416955921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-87577227012616070892015-11-25T18:54:24.035+00:002015-11-25T18:54:24.035+00:00This comment has been removed by the author.David Crosbiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01858358459416955921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-52019356043175095612015-11-25T18:53:14.596+00:002015-11-25T18:53:14.596+00:00There's an OED entry for the word spelled eith...There's an OED entry for the word spelled either as <i>gotcha</i> or <i>gotcher</i> — which is fine for most British accents. The earlier of the two quotes is from a 1032 novel by Edgar Wallace<br /><br /><i>The 'plane was nearing the centre of Cavendish Square, when it suddenly heeled over. Its tail went down and it fell with a crash in the centre of the garden which occupied the middle of the square. ‘Gotcher!’ It was Jiggs' triumphant voice.</i>David Crosbiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01858358459416955921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-33326037827651742712015-11-24T23:23:49.953+00:002015-11-24T23:23:49.953+00:00Yes, Rachel, I know. I remembered that one. But it...Yes, Rachel, I know. I remembered that one. But it was not with with the same meaning, and not as a noun.Drunoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-66454217819092294952015-11-24T10:28:59.249+00:002015-11-24T10:28:59.249+00:00@Dru: Gotcha has been around in the UK for quite s...@Dru: Gotcha has been around in the UK for quite some time. Famously in <a href="http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/features/frontpage/gotcha.html" rel="nofollow"> this headline during the Falklands War </a>Rachel Ganzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16512329333010333925noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-19591855747604787962015-11-23T15:13:57.313+00:002015-11-23T15:13:57.313+00:00"One-off" for "one of a kind" ..."One-off" for "one of a kind" seems more common in various media lately. I still have to look it up to be sure what it means, but it seems to be creeping across the Atlantic more firmly then a number of other uses that get proposed for such lists.n0aaahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08020996948408839877noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-46807358874573782732015-11-23T15:03:59.052+00:002015-11-23T15:03:59.052+00:00Wouldn't that be a cheeseburger?Wouldn't that be a cheeseburger?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-45392696916741028642015-11-22T15:47:27.327+00:002015-11-22T15:47:27.327+00:00Interesting and curious. I've not encountered ...Interesting and curious. I've not encountered that one. Is it perhaps a London peculiarity. I think I'd have assumed a Mac and Cheese was a bap with some sort of burger but with a slice of cheese in the bap as well.Drunoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-74757026129859038412015-11-21T16:39:24.747+00:002015-11-21T16:39:24.747+00:00Can I nominate "Mac and Cheese" as a US ...Can I nominate "Mac and Cheese" as a US to UK word? Being British, I tend to call the dish "macaroni cheese" but I've noticed it a lot over the last year on British pub menus as "mac and cheese" (which I believe is an American term). I did a quick Google of pubs near me (West London) and of those which offer it on the menu, they all call it mac and cheese.<br /><br />Rosemary.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-25891174111716577122015-11-21T08:35:32.421+00:002015-11-21T08:35:32.421+00:00I also agree with Laura Cameron that the book soun...I also agree with Laura Cameron that the book sounds amazing, and as a student of the field of comparative linguistics/linguistic anthropology (how words are actually used and travel and how dialects and languages diverge over time while borrowing from each other in the meantime, specifically, espcially but not always historically) I am highly looking forward to it and hope it will be available for kindle when it is published. Best of luck to you with that endeavour! <br /><br />As well, I forgot to mention that I would vote for backbenchers as the UK-to-US word, this is the first year I've seen it used so frequently by so many sources in an American context. It sounds very odd to my ear to be honest, as I'm familiar with it as a Briticism. <br /><br />Wearables also sounds like a good candidate in the opposite direction - when the word makes it to Doctor Who, it has truly arrived in the zeitgeist of the UK culture. Sorry for not having alternative suggestions, but I would absolutely vote for those, they are good ones imo. Lir Talanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08916443387868327289noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-63382899731336161602015-11-21T08:25:19.132+00:002015-11-21T08:25:19.132+00:00Have to disagree, the 'gotcha' is very com...Have to disagree, the 'gotcha' is very commonly understood in the context of politics in general, at every level, in every election, from the least important state and county races to the national and presidential. Republicans are simply complaining about it more loudly this year because they have presented many opportunities to easily do this and make themselves look bad. Lir Talanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08916443387868327289noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-74515089929039310942015-11-17T00:41:07.816+00:002015-11-17T00:41:07.816+00:00Dru - a "gotcha question" is just a tric...Dru - a "gotcha question" is just a trick question. Outside of the context of the recent republican debates, i don't know that anyone in the US would call anything "a gotcha" and expect to be understood.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-13165425235580135452015-11-16T14:28:17.381+00:002015-11-16T14:28:17.381+00:00A further thought on the declining importance of b...A further thought on the declining importance of backbenchers.<br /><br />Until comparatively recently, the leaders of there main parties were chosen exclusively by the MPs, of whom the backbenchers were well and away the majority. This could amount to choosing the next Prime Minister. Now all the parties have electoral processes which involve the whole membership. Indeed, the Labour Party has just had an election where you didn't even need to be a party member, provided that you sympathised with the party's aims.<br /><br />Backbenchers still have more of an effect on the vote, but so do all MPs, frontbencher, backbench and payroll.David Crosbiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01858358459416955921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-30766281109258671222015-11-16T10:50:01.548+00:002015-11-16T10:50:01.548+00:00The connotations of backbencher have changed in re...The connotations of <i>backbencher</i> have changed in recent times.<br /><br />I remember a time when <i>the backbenchers</i> evoked a picture of 'the troops', the foot-soldier majority. One sensed that they had a power — albeit one that could be used only very seldom. They were a majority; without their continued support the leadership would be lost.<br /><br />Nowadays, the connotation is of a minority whose support is not crucial — most of the time. <br /><br />What has brought about this change is the rise of the so-called 'payroll'. Between the true backbenchers and the government ministers of the <b>front bench</b> are a swollen number of junior assistants to Ministers within ministries and as 'parliamentary secretaries'. Some of these are real jobs with salaries; some are unpaid. Either way, they are stepping stones to real power. Crucially, the holders are a <b>clientage</b>; the Prime Minister and senior ministers appoint them and thereby become <b>patrons</b> who expect to be rewarded by their loyalty. As well as personal loyalty to individual patrons, these appointments place an increased pressure on 'the payroll' to support the party line and vote as required by the <i>'whips'</i>.<br /><br />So <i>backbenchers</i> nowadays are seen as a minority of free spirits who have nothing to lose, and are much more likely to vote against the party line.David Crosbiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01858358459416955921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-48509747179792849202015-11-14T21:19:04.385+00:002015-11-14T21:19:04.385+00:00There's another fundamental difference. Our eq...There's another fundamental difference. Our equivalent of the Leader of the House is the Prime Minister. However, the PM exercises actual power more comparable to the President and his Cabinet but is personally answerable to the House of Commons, as are the other Ministers. There are also shadow ministers who have comparable portfolios in the opposition. They have no power but are hungry for it.<br /><br />Ministers and shadow ministers sit in the front rows facing each other on opposite sides of the House. The rest sit in tiered rows behind them. So back benchers are rank and file members of Parliament who have no such responsibilities. Their parties expect them to vote in accordance with instructions, but some are more compliant than others. Ministers who are demoted return to the back benches.<br /><br />I've got the impression over the years that people on opposite sides of the Atlantic are surprisingly unaware quite how different our constitutional set-ups are. That's more surprising in the US, which has a land neighbour whose constitutional tradition is much more like ours than yours.<br /><br /><br />Changing the subject, I came across a new word today which I'm going to predict will migrate eastwards, though whether it does by December 31st or early next year, I'm less sure. It's a 'gotcha'. <br /><br />Obviously, that's slang. If I've got it right, it's a question a media person puts to a politician which catches the politician out. Specifically It's one that fools him or her into giving an answer which self-plasters the face with egg.Drunoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-56879981774672802182015-11-13T22:51:12.692+00:002015-11-13T22:51:12.692+00:00Irene C. said... congressional procedure has been ...Irene C. said... congressional procedure has been altered along Westminsterian lines (centralizing power in the speakership, making the position partisan, tightening party influence over committees, the Hastert Rule) since Newt Gingrich became speaker in 1995<br />==<br /><br />For the record our Westminster Speaker isn't partisan, that's the Leader of the House (cf Majority Leader)Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04394336486931981027noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-63470259871200953562015-11-13T18:34:47.094+00:002015-11-13T18:34:47.094+00:00What's interesting about the US use of "b...What's interesting about the US use of "back-benchers' cited here is that isn't quite the same as what it means where it started off. This is something about expressions migrating that I've commented on before.Drunoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28787909.post-68524430347981335892015-11-13T14:41:24.831+00:002015-11-13T14:41:24.831+00:00Irene C - I saw a US newspaper use "back-benc...Irene C - I saw a US newspaper use "back-benchers" too! It was referring to the also-ran Republican candidates in the debate the other night.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com