16 thoughts on “May I Have A Word?

  1. Be thankful that you’re an American. Some languages are proper noblemen; ours is the town harlot. She picks up anything a passerby might give her. As Americans, we get even more mixed into our English.Report

          1. My linguistics housemate when I was in graduate school always told me that English was very difficult to learn fluently. He also cited the large number of pidgins and creoles based on English, both existing and extinct, as a demonstration that it’s easy to learn enough of the language to handle very basic communication.Report

              1. I grew up, from about age three to 23, in towns/cities in the relatively small region of the country where everyone spoke “Standard American English”. To be blunt, the TV networks spent money to train their news readers to speak just like I (and my friends and family) did.

                In hindsight, I was disturbingly old before I realized that regional accents were something that still existed, rather than being quaint historical artifacts.Report

  2. Back when I took Latin, we had a board game called “Ludi” that required you to circle the board and identify English words containing certain suffixes and prefixes. Once a word was used, it couldn’t be re-used. Some were much harder than others. If you couldn’t identify one, you had to go back a few spaces. For some reason, the board was constructed such that moving back from one hard space took you to an even harder space and that one in turn took you to an even harder space. We called it “Ludi hell.”

    Google tells me this game does not and never did exist.Report

      1. Apparently there are many games called “Games” and they were crowding out the obscure quasi-educational Roman chariot themed game that might have only existed in the cabinet of my high school world languages classroom.Report

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