November 4, 2025
A brief follow-up to my 11/2 posting “poetite”, about the NYT’s Spelling Bee puzzle, in which I wrote:
Spelling Bee’s dictionary is mighty persnickety. Editor Sam Ezersky uses some standard dictionaries as a rough basis for his puzzle dictionary, but his judgments are strongly personal, and consequently often fiercely disputed. Grievances are sometimes unloaded in Facebook.
A comment that led to a Facebook exchange between Karen Davis and me.
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Posted in Age, Lexicography, Linguistics in the comics, Toys and games, Word play | Leave a Comment »
November 4, 2025
🎈 election day in my country🎈 (the first Tuesday in November) — for which I re-play this Jim Benton cartoon:

(#1) From my 3/3/25 posting “Warnings”: it’s all the fault of the Cassandras; they should have made us believe them, they shouldn’t have let us not believe them
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Posted in Books, Errors, Events and occasions, Language and politics, Language and the sexes, Linguistics in the comics | Leave a Comment »
November 3, 2025
Yesterday in Stephan Pastis’s Pearls Before Swine:

A Stephan Pastis specialty, the formula pun — or setup / payoff pun — joke (with a final panel in which the character Rat threatens the cartoonist (as a cartoon character) with violence for committing a preposterous pun
Two things then: The joke form, and Billy Joel’s “Only the Good Die Young”.
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Posted in Comic conventions, Formulaic expressions, Jokes, Language of sex, Linguistics in the comics, Music, Puns | Leave a Comment »
November 2, 2025
Faced with this judgment on Facebook today about the Spelling Bee puzzle from the New York Times,

(#1) POETITE: not a word (in the Spelling Bee dictionary)
Dennis Baron owlishly protested with word play incorporating a pun on concrete:
It’s the stuff concrete poems are made from.
Well played, Dennis!
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Posted in Ambiguity, Compounds, Derivation, Lexical semantics, Lexicography, Poetry, Puns, Word play | 1 Comment »
November 1, 2025
🐇 🐇 🐇 rabbit rabbit rabbit to inaugurate November; it’s a beautiful bright fall day here in Palo Alto, the day after the costumes and candy of Halloween, and also The Day of the Dead, to honor those who have died before us
This posting is a continuation of yesterday’s “Medicine Day”, a list — an alarming inventory — of the medically significant conditions of my life, very roughly in chronological order. I admitted that the list was surely incomplete, and in fact I was driven to get up in the middle of the night to construct a second list, almost as big as the first.
But I will hold that recital of afflictions off for a bit, to entertain you with a note on one of my grand-child Opal’s favorite Halloween candies and one on yellow-orange marigolds for Mexican remembrances of the beloved dead.
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Posted in Art, Events and occasions, Folk beliefs, Holidays, Language and food, Language and medicine, Language and plants, Language and religion, Language and the body | Leave a Comment »
October 31, 2025
🐅 🐅 🐅 tiger tiger tiger for ultimate October; and of course that very odd couple, Halloween and (Protestant) Reformation Day (put on your best witch’s hat and nail some theses to the old church door!)
Musing over the oddities of my life this morning, I recalled a series of unusual medical conditions that suddenly turned up and then passed away: otoliths with (terrible) vertigo, Bell’s palsy, a (benign but quite notable) scrotal mass, that sort of thing. So I set out to list the medically significant conditions of my life, very roughly in chronological order.
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Posted in Events and occasions, Holidays, Language and medicine, My life | 2 Comments »
October 30, 2025
In my posting yesterday “Penultimate October”, 10/30 was billed simply as Halloween Eve (with two, more eventful, days to follow). In fact it’s two — two! — occasions in one: Grace Slick’s birthday (1939), and the War of the Worlds broadcast anniversary (1938), 86 and 87 years ago (so GS is just a year older than I am). Very brief notes.
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Posted in Books, Music, Plays | 2 Comments »
October 30, 2025
💀 💀 💀 three days in October: Halloween Eve, Halloween, Day of the Dead — with today’s Bob cartoon for the second of these occasions; and then the Day of the Dead is also a significant day for me personally — my (Path to) Sobriety Day, the day I took my last drink, 5 years ago now
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Posted in Books, Events and occasions, Holidays, Language and animals, Language of medicine, Linguistics in the comics, My life, This blogging life, Writers | Leave a Comment »
October 29, 2025
The background, from FactCheck.org (a project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center), “Meme Doctors Quote From Well-Known Satirist” by Angelo Fichera on 12/12/19:
[satirical columnist Andy] Borowitz … in a post to his verified Facebook page in 2016:
Stopping T**mp is a short-term solution. The long-term solution, and it will be more difficult, is fixing the educational system that has created so many people ignorant enough to vote for T**mp.
This was quoted (in a punctuational variant) on Facebook today, with ensuing commentary (edited some here):
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Posted in Education, Language and politics, Metaphor, Morality, Slogans | Leave a Comment »
October 28, 2025
Yesterday on this blog, the posting “LSA news bulletin: awards” on (among other things)
Kira Hall — of the University of Colorado, Boulder — as the 5th recipient of the … Arnold Zwicky Award, intended to recognize LGBTQ+ scholars and those whose work in linguistics benefits the LGBTQ+ community.
Now, some basic information about KH, from Wikipedia and from the University of Colorado website; I might add some further information about her in a while.
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Posted in Anthropology, Awards, Gender and sexuality, Linguists, Sociolinguistics | 1 Comment »