'Pride and prejudice' before Jane Austen. Was Parson Brown a real person? Happy Panda.

'Pride and prejudice' before Jane Austen. Was Parson Brown a real person? Happy Panda.

1142. This week, we look at the history of the phrase "pride and prejudice," which was used frequently before Jane Austen’s 1813 novel. Then, we look at whether Parson Brown from “Winter Wonderland” was a real person, and why his name is sometimes replaced with a “circus clown.”

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Jaksot(1043)

Decoding the Chinese character paradox, with Dr. Charles Kemp

Decoding the Chinese character paradox, with Dr. Charles Kemp

1203. In this bonus discussion with Dr. Charles Kemp, we look at why the Chinese writing system has actually become visually more complex over thousands of years. Dr. Kemp explains how his team used "...

16 Heinä 12min

Isn't it ironic? Plus, the man behind the guillotine

Isn't it ironic? Plus, the man behind the guillotine

1202. This week, we look at the tricky question of what makes something ironic, including situational irony, verbal irony, and "skunked" words, with help from psychologist and author Roger Kreuz. Then...

14 Heinä 11min

Saving Canadian lexicography, with John Chew

Saving Canadian lexicography, with John Chew

1201. In this bonus discussion from January, we look at why Canada has been without a current homegrown dictionary for twenty years and how John Chew is leading the charge to fix it. We look at how Jo...

9 Heinä 37min

Snowclones: fill-in-the-blank phrases we can’t stop remixing. Plus, is it 'RBIs' or 'RBI'?

Snowclones: fill-in-the-blank phrases we can’t stop remixing. Plus, is it 'RBIs' or 'RBI'?

1200. This week, we look at snowclones like “X is the new Y,” including where the name came from and why we find them so satisfying. Then, we look at how to make abbreviations like “RBI” plural, inclu...

7 Heinä 9min

Building a beloved resource for word lovers, with Doug Harper

Building a beloved resource for word lovers, with Doug Harper

1199. In this bonus episode first released to Grammarpaloozians in January, we look at what it means to turn a "channeled obsession" into a resource used by millions of language fans. Doug Harper shar...

2 Heinä 27min

How to answer the question 'What's your book about?'

How to answer the question 'What's your book about?'

1198. This week, we look at how to answer the question every author dreads: "So, what's your book about?" with workplace communications coach Joel Schwartzberg. We look at the difference between descr...

30 Kesä 10min

Fossil words, eponyms, and a miscellany of weird facts, with Jess Zafarris and Shannon Miller

Fossil words, eponyms, and a miscellany of weird facts, with Jess Zafarris and Shannon Miller

1197. This week, guest host Valerie Fridland steps in for Mignon and talks to Jess Zafarris and Shannon Miller about their new book, "A Miscellany of Weird and Wonderful Facts for Curious Humans." The...

25 Kesä 38min

Why 'love' means 'zero' in tennis

Why 'love' means 'zero' in tennis

1196. This week, we look at why "love" means "zero" in tennis, from egg-shaped zeros to playing for the love of the game, and how the sport's quirky 15-30-40 scoring system came to be. 🔗 Join the Gra...

23 Kesä 8min

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