Predicting New Words: the Secrets of Their Success - Allan Metcalf Professor - Livros - Houghton Mifflin Harcourt - 9780618130085 - 14 de julho de 2004
Caso a capa e o título não sejam correspondentes, considere o título como correto

Predicting New Words: the Secrets of Their Success Reprint edition

Allan Metcalf Professor

Preço
R$ 112,90

Item sob encomenda (no estoque do fornecedor)

Espera-se estar pronto para envio 17 - 27 de mai
Adicione à sua lista de desejos do iMusic

Predicting New Words: the Secrets of Their Success Reprint edition

Have you ever aspired to gain linguistic immortality by making up a word? Many people ? such famous writers as Jonathan Swift, Lewis Carroll, and Dr. Seuss, along with many lesser-knowns ? have coined new words that have endured. But most of the new words people put forward fail to find favor. Why are some new words adopted, while others are ignored? Allan Metcalf explores this question in his fascinating look at new-word creation.
In surveying past coinages and proposed new words, Metcalf discerns lessons for linguistic longevity. He shows us, for instance, why the humorist Gelett Burgess succeeded in contributing the words blurb and bromide to the language but failed to win anyone over to bleesh or diabob. Metcalf examines terms invented to describe political causes and social phenomena (silent majority, Gen-X), terms coined in books (edge city, Catch-22), brand names and words derived from them (aspirin, Ping-Pong), and words that derive from misunderstandings (cherry, kudo). He develops a scale for predicting the success of newly coined words and uses it to foretell which emerging words will outlast the twenty-first century. In this highly original work, Metcalf shows us how to spin syllabic straw into linguistic gold.

Mídia Livros     Paperback Book   (Livro de capa flexível e brochura)
Lançado 14 de julho de 2004
ISBN13 9780618130085
Editoras Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Páginas 228
Dimensões 117 × 14 × 199 mm   ·   258 g
Idioma English  

Mostrar tudo

Mais por Allan Metcalf Professor