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A Gazelle on the Lawn (rebroadcast) - 13 Sept. 2010

A Gazelle on the Lawn (rebroadcast) - 13 Sept. 2010

What do you say when someone has food in their teeth? Plus: fire words, meet the baby parties, pronunciatio of "realtor," honyocks, more...

A Way with Words - language, linguistics, and callers from all over · Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett. Produced by Stefanie Levine.

September 14, 201051m 59s

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Show Notes

[This episode first aired March 13, 2010.]

What do you say if you have guests over and someone in your family has stray food left on the face? In some households, the secret warning is "there's a gazelle on the lawn." But why a gazelle? Also, this week: the "term for a party" to introduce one's new baby to family and friends, the past tense of the verb "to text," and why some people use three syllables when pronouncing "realtor." And did you know there's a language in which it's perfectly normal to "wash your clothes in Barf"?

A recent fire in Grant's apartment building has him pondering the role played by "fire" in English idioms.

A listener in Washington, D.C., says that his parents taught him that when guests were over for dinner and a family member had specks of food on his face, the polite way to surreptitiously nudge him into wiping it off was to say, "Look! There's a gazelle on the lawn." Is that unique to his family?

Martha shares a great automotive Tom Swifty sent in by a listener.

What do you call a party that new parents throw to introduce a baby to family and friends? Kiss-and-cry? Try "sip-and-see."

Here's the kind of riddle they were telling more than a century ago: "The lazy schoolboy hates my name, yet eats me every day. But those who seek scholastic fame to hunt me never delay."

Quiz Guy Greg Pliska has a word quiz about words and phrases that have two sets of a double letter. Here's an example with a one-word answer: "The place where you learn 'the three R's.'"

A Tallahassee listener hates it when realtors pronounce the name of their profession "REAL-a-tor." Why do they do that?

What's the proper past tense of the word "text"? Texted or text?

Martha tries to stump Grant with another Tom Swifty, this one nautical in nature.

The phrases "Well, I swan!" and "Well, I swannee!" are genteel substitutes for swearing. Where do those phrases come from?

Martha shares listener email about linguistic "false friends," those perplexing words in other languages that look like English words, but mean something completely different. A case in point is the detergent popular in the Middle East called "Barf," the name of which happens to be the Farsi word for "snow." Skeptical? Behold: http://www.flickr.com/photos/elmada/254689286/ !

Dry a grape and it becomes a raisin, dry a plum and it turns into a prune. Why don't we just call them dried grapes and dried plums?

Parents sometimes refer to their rascally kids as "honyocks." Where'd we get a word like that?

Another riddle: "Why is 'O; the noisiest of all the vowels?"

What's the difference between a lexicographer, a linguist, and a wordsmith?

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