Unfortunate English : the gloomy truth behind the words you use / Bill Brohaugh.

By: Brohaugh, WilliamMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Cincinnati, Ohio : Writer's Digest, 2009, c2006Description: 184 p. : ill. ; 19 cmISBN: 9781582976198; 1582976198; 9781582974439; 1582974438Subject(s): English language -- Etymology | English language -- Terms and phrases | English language -- HistoryDDC classification: 422 Summary: HISTORICAL & COMPARATIVE LINGUISTICS. This is a book of word histories, highlighting the deintensification of the disgusting, the generalisation of the ribald, the mutation of the offensive, and occasionally sensationalising of the innocent. What sensitivities are you secretly offending when you use such words as poppycock, bonfire, and porcelain? What political incorrectness are you courting when you use such words as lampoon, sinister, or flamingo? Who have you insulted, what sensitivity have you jostled, what breach of propriety have you committed when you use such remarkably innocent words as butterfly, gymnasium, and fizzle? This title addresses such topics, uncovering previous meanings of words that would - if those meanings were blatantly apparent today - offend the sensitive, discomfit the squeamish, and irk the politically correct.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Adult Nonfiction
422 BRO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111042591501

Originally published: 2006.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 172-175) and index.

HISTORICAL & COMPARATIVE LINGUISTICS. This is a book of word histories, highlighting the deintensification of the disgusting, the generalisation of the ribald, the mutation of the offensive, and occasionally sensationalising of the innocent. What sensitivities are you secretly offending when you use such words as poppycock, bonfire, and porcelain? What political incorrectness are you courting when you use such words as lampoon, sinister, or flamingo? Who have you insulted, what sensitivity have you jostled, what breach of propriety have you committed when you use such remarkably innocent words as butterfly, gymnasium, and fizzle? This title addresses such topics, uncovering previous meanings of words that would - if those meanings were blatantly apparent today - offend the sensitive, discomfit the squeamish, and irk the politically correct.

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