CultureDesk, to conservative
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

The term "fan" to mean avid supporter only came into popular use in the 19th century. Before that, words like "kranks," "habitués" and "lions" were used. There were even equivalents of today's fandoms that focus on a specific performer (like Swifties and Cumberbitches) in the form of Lisztians, who loved the composer Franz Liszt. Atlas Obscura spoke with Daniel Cavicchi, an American Studies scholar, about the history of fans and the words we've used to describe them. “How you name yourself says a lot about what you think of yourself and your very intense passions,” Cavicchi says. “But at the same time, another name or variation on the name, or another use of your name, maybe in a derogatory sense, may say something about what the culture thinks about you.”

https://flip.it/F1tS5z
#Culture #Etymology #Fandoms #Words #Language

NatureMC, to translator
@NatureMC@mastodon.online avatar

For some time now, I've noticed that is increasingly hallucinating. I sometimes use it for complex, complicated sentences or to check my wording. More often now, I get commonplace verbs, if I emphasise something in a word, formulate it sarcastically, or very critically. Another thing that utterly gets on my nerves is . The thing is trained patriarchal straight.
Deepl is still the best I know but these kinds of mistakes are increasing.

NatureMC,
@NatureMC@mastodon.online avatar

@wernerprise Although I write and speak BE, my favourite dictionary is also ! I do love their wordplay section where you can learn they never teached you in school.🤭 https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/rare-and-amusing-insults-volume-3

Aleenaa, to art
@Aleenaa@india.goonj.xyz avatar

Representation of the repressed thoughts trying to come out and escape.

#art #creative #visual #sketch #artist #doodle #words @mastodonindians

qmacro, to random
@qmacro@hachyderm.io avatar

I enjoyed the Grammar Girl podcast episode "'Addictive' or 'addicting'? Types of nouns. Folley" this morning.

https://grammar-girl.simplecast.com/episodes/addictive

Bonus: I'd like to think that @grammargirl threw in "countries" as an example of a concrete noun as a curveball to see if we were paying attention ;-)

wrosecrans, to writing
@wrosecrans@mstdn.social avatar

I accidentally created the word "uncestors" from a typo. It now means all of the people in the past who aren't your ancestors. Go forth and talk about your uncestors from this day forth!

OEWordhord, to Korean
@OEWordhord@mastodon.social avatar

I got to chat with @grammargirl! Watch our chat about air worms and fire-breathing dragons and other medieval delights on her Youtube channel. https://youtu.be/25iQJbsGu5Y?si=7aZmI7zy8rxf3G5b #medievodons #language #words #TheWordhord #TheDeorhord

davidtoddmccarty, to Korean
@davidtoddmccarty@me.dm avatar

Word Of The Day: Defenestration

(from Neo-Latin de fenestrā) 1. The act of throwing someone or something out of a window. 2. A swift dismissal or expulsion (as from a political party or office).

The term was coined around the time of an incident in Prague Castle in the year 1618.

english, to Catroventos
@english@unfufadoo.net avatar
english, to Catroventos
@english@unfufadoo.net avatar
NickEast, to linguistics
@NickEast@geekdom.social avatar

I fully endorse this blink, wink plurality 😜

@linguistics @linguisticsmemes
@humour

sfwrtr, to writing
@sfwrtr@eldritch.cafe avatar

History of #hack.

  1. Chop to bits
  2. Cough (chopping your lungs to bits?)
  3. Make a computer talk to another computer (as in arpanet Apple ] days)
  4. Break security on a computer or network ("We're in!!")
  5. Now: Quick and simple way to do something, usu as in on TikTok or similar

[#boostingIsSharing

#Author #Writing #WritersOfMastodon #WritingCommunity #words

tallandtrue, to Etymology
@tallandtrue@aus.social avatar

I'll be more careful using the word "schmuck" after reading this post on the Yiddish origin of words by for the 's weekly Q&A! 😳

Link to Writer's Centre website: https://www.writerscentre.com.au/blog/qa-the-origin-of-glitch-shemozzle-and-more/

SharonCummingsArt, to Birds
@SharonCummingsArt@mastodon.social avatar
metin, to Quotes
@metin@graphics.social avatar

Reading this, the first name that popped up in my mind was Trump. 😏

Ironically, it's a quote by a former US President.

#quote #quotes #president #trump #DonaldTrump #irony #words

CultureDesk, to politics
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

President Joe Biden and Donald Trump don't want to use their opponents' names, instead favoring nicknames and circumlocutions like"the former guy" and "Sleepy Joe." For @TheConversationUS, Roger J. Kreuz takes a look at Biden's rhetorical tactic — the Voldemort effect, or a cardinal principle of advertising: never mention your competitor by name. He also examines Trump's approach of othering via mispronouncing names and tapping into xenophobia.

https://flip.it/Cvr_Kr

For more stories like this, follow @ConversationUS's Arts & Culture Magazine, @arts.

fkamiah17, to Life
@fkamiah17@toot.wales avatar

I've just come across the Old English compound word "hord-wynn" (hoard-joy), which refers to treasure that delights.
That's how I'm going to be thinking of my library from now on 🥰 📚

jeridansky, to writing
@jeridansky@sfba.social avatar

April 1, and sadly not a joke: Dictionary.com and Thesaurus.com get acquired:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/ixl-learning-acquires-dictionary-com-121500032.html

April 12: The entire team of lexicographers at Dictionary.com gets laid off.
https://bsky.app/profile/korystamper.bsky.social/post/3kpxgzhx7eo2l

Klepsis, to random
@Klepsis@mastodonbooks.net avatar


10. Do you have favourite words you like to use?

I try not to play favorites. All the other words get upset and then I can never get any work out of them.



SergKoren, to random
@SergKoren@writing.exchange avatar

Colander: co-lander. An alien inventioin?

SergKoren, to random
@SergKoren@writing.exchange avatar

Three solar shadows on the moon in a row are known as an eclipses…

SergKoren, to writing
@SergKoren@writing.exchange avatar

When was the last time you actually said, “I’m going to retire for the night,” when going to bed?

Doesn’t “retire” actually mean to get tired again? Or is it more a matter of putting new wheels on your whip?

english, to Catroventos
@english@unfufadoo.net avatar
jadebees, to writing
@jadebees@better.boston avatar

🪻🌷🐝 🌸🐛🌻🦋🌼

For lovers of and , Nancy Lawson's essay on what language we have been taught to use is very thought-provoking. Is a lawn well-kept, manicured, pristine -- or undergrown? So many of the used to denigrate a thriving filled with and imply something savage that needs to be beaten into submission: aggressive, weedy, pest, unruly. Let's call them lush, exuberant, and alive!

eyesquash, to poetry
@eyesquash@mastodon.world avatar

#Poetry is because humans found a way to make #words more difficult.

siblingpastry, to writing
@siblingpastry@mastodon.world avatar

Since "invariably" means -- all the time (without variation).

Why does it sound like it means -- most of the time (with rare variation)?

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