Why some verb sets are so odd (like 'go/went'). Corporate euphemisms. Goggy.

Why some verb sets are so odd (like 'go/went'). Corporate euphemisms. Goggy.

1016. This week, we look at why some verbs are so irregular that their forms don't even seem related, like "go" and "went." Then, we look at the surprising finding that corporate euphemisms are worse than annoying — they can also hurt a company's stock price.

The "suppletion" segment was written by Valerie Fridland, a professor of linguistics at the University of Nevada in Reno and the author of "Like, Literally, Dude: Arguing for the Good in Bad English." You can find her at valeriefridland.com.

The "corporate euphemisms" segment was was written by Kate Suslava, an associate professor of accounting at Bucknell University. It originally appeared on The Conversation and appears here through a Creative Commons license, BY-ND 4.0.

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Episoder(1013)

Why print dictionaries still matter, with Peter Sokolowski

Why print dictionaries still matter, with Peter Sokolowski

1135. This week, we talk with Peter Sokolowski, editor at large at Merriam-Webster, about the new print 12th Collegiate Dictionary. We look at why print still matters, how the dictionary used lookup d...

20 Nov 202535min

Personification in language and AI. Dictums, maxims, and proverbs. Expensitive.

Personification in language and AI. Dictums, maxims, and proverbs. Expensitive.

1134. This week, we look at the poetic power of personification (the language quirk that gives human traits to nonhuman things) and why style guides advise against using it for AI. Then, we look at th...

18 Nov 202517min

The secret rules of crossword puzzles, with Natan Last

The secret rules of crossword puzzles, with Natan Last

1133. This week, crossword pro Natan Last talks about his book "Across the Universe." We look at the technical and cultural differences between American and British puzzle styles and the secrets that ...

13 Nov 202529min

How '23 skidoo' & 'at sixes and sevens' are related to '6-7.'

How '23 skidoo' & 'at sixes and sevens' are related to '6-7.'

1132. This week, in honor of Dictionary.com choosing "6-7" as its Word of the Year, we look at the origin of other number phrases: "23 skidoo" and "at sixes and sevens."🔗 Share your familect recordin...

11 Nov 202518min

What a ‘Science' magazine experiment says about the future of AI in journalism, with Abigail Eisenstadt

What a ‘Science' magazine experiment says about the future of AI in journalism, with Abigail Eisenstadt

1131. This week, we talk with ‘Science' magazine senior writer Abigail Eisenstadt about her team's year-long experiment testing ChatGPT's ability to summarize research papers. We look at their methodo...

6 Nov 202523min

What Roman togas have to do with today's elections. 'Home in' versus 'hone in.'

What Roman togas have to do with today's elections. 'Home in' versus 'hone in.'

1130. This week, we look at words related to elections, and then I help you remember the difference between "home in" and "hone in" with a tip that includes a shocking historical tidbit about spiders....

4 Nov 202516min

Finding the true history of words, with Ben Zimmer

Finding the true history of words, with Ben Zimmer

1129. This week, we talk with Ben Zimmer about the linguistic detective work of antedating words — finding earlier usages than those published in dictionaries. We look at the surprising origins of "Ms...

30 Okt 202526min

‘Ghost words’ and their history. Rules for ‘between’ and ‘among.’ Wilsoning.

‘Ghost words’ and their history. Rules for ‘between’ and ‘among.’ Wilsoning.

1128. This week, in honor of Halloween, we look at “ghost words” and phrases, from “ghost runners” in baseball to “ghost forests” made by earthquakes. We also look at the difference between “between” ...

28 Okt 202514min

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