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Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
Word of the Day: inexorably

This word has appeared in 49 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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Idiom of the Day
in all seriousness

In one's sincere opinion; without any disingenuousness. Watch the video

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Word of the Day
fleecy

Definition: (adjective) Having soft nap produced by brushing.
Synonyms: napped, brushed.
Usage: Though the train was unbearably cold, she snuggled into the fleecy lining of her coat and promptly fell asleep.
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(2020).
* "Bezoar" (8/2/21)
* "Official digraphia" (9/13/18)

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ilk Road: artistic exchange and transmission in early China", published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2024; Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, First View, pp. 1 – 26.  This article has impressed me to such a degree that I have rechristened the road she wrote about as "The Southwest Bronze Road".

Still under excavation and investigation by Chinese archeologists is the enormous new site of Shimao (coordinates are 38.5657°N 110.3252°E on the eastern edge of the Ordos), which stands at the cusp of the Bronze Age, has unmistakable affinities with Sanxingdui (coordinates 30.9916°N 104.2021°E) near Chengdu in the Southwest, and displays startling similarities to cultures that are thousands of miles away.  Once Shimao is studied more fully, it will transform our understanding of the rise of East Asia civilization and its ties to the rest of Eurasia.

2. China Babel faced similar difficulties.  It was based on ideas that I had first entertained in the 70s, indeed already in a nebulous way in the 60s.  Namely, I envisaged that, through heightened intensity and increased speed of language contact, there would be more and more borrowing, especially from English into other languages, but also from other languages into each other and into English.  I completed the first draft in the summer of 1986, when I seemed to have boundless energy, revised it in October 1986, did a second revision in March 1987, and a third revision in May 1990.  I planned to submit it for publication in January 1994, but by that time I had become so enmired in mummies research that it ceased to occupy any active space in my mind.  I started to think about it again around 2020 when the pandemic struck, but didn't push the idea of publication very hard because my closest friends advised me that, for reasons of political incorrectness, it would not be welcomed by academic arbiters.  The primary grounds on which they predicted that it was too early for a book like China Babel is that it predicted the recognition of the major Sinitic topolects as full-fledged languages, not mere dialects of Mandarin, and that it foresaw the gradual Englishization of Mandarin until it gradually merged with the world language. China Babel still rests in a box in my basement, nearly four decades after I wrote it.

3. The Archeology of Lost Affection, a novel that is based on some photographic "shards" that I found in the desert near Qumul / Hami in Eastern Central Asia on May 25, 1998.  It took me another year or two to write the book, including making a special trip back to China to check some details, particularly in the environs of Rizhao 日照, Shandong.  The ms then moldered untouched in my basement until late 2020 when, under lockdown, having relatively more free time, I decided to go forward with its publication, which took place on May 25, 2021 from Camphor Press (apparently it's available on Amazon).  Unlike the previous two items, Archeology was not politically or culturally sensitive, so I saw no harm in putting it before the public — two decades after it was written

As I said to a friend of mine when he asked about the eventual fate of my remaining unpublished manuscripts,

I don't mind waiting another 40 years when the times are more propitious — many of my Chinese students say they hope I will live to be 120!  After all, my old friend, Zhou Youguang (1906-2017), main deviser of Hanyu Pinyin, lived to the age of 111, and I'm certain that he could have lived even longer had it not been for his deep disappointment over the failure of democracy to develop in China.

Meanwhile, willy-nilly, bits and pieces are leaking out, and colleagues are publishing their own hypotheses linking east and west. Selected readings

* "The role of long-distance communication in human history" (1/26/23)
* "Bronze, iron, gold, silver" (1/29/21)
* "Eurasian eureka" (9/12/16)
* Andrew Sherratt, "The Trans-Eurasian Exchange: The Prehistory of Chinese Re[...]

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Funny Or Die (Youtube)
Jewtinas with Joanna Hausmann (Bless These Braces: Episode 5)


Writer and comedian Joanna Hausmann (Hamster and Gretel, Bill Nye Saves The World) joins Tam Yajia to talk doing therapy in Spanish, the best Yiddish words, and the smell so bad Tam's husband passed out.

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Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
goof off | goof around

waste time, play around

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Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
do up (2)

If you do up a zip, a button, or a shoelace, you secure it in some way.

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Learn English Through Football Podcast: As it Stands/Standings

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Idiom of the Day
win (something) in a walk

To win (something) easily, handily, or without much or any effort. Watch the video

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Word of the Day
roster

Definition: (noun) A list, especially of names.
Synonyms: roll.
Usage: The spy's mission was to compile a roster of officials amenable to bribery.
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Language Log
Schwa

xkcd (3/15/24)

https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/schwa.png

(image URL) (explanation; transcript; discussion)
Selected reading

* "Linguist Llama" (10/26/11) — never stressed
* "'Skadoosh' and the case of the schwa" (6/29/08)
* "Schwa Fire" (5/25/14)

[h.t. Edward M. McClure]

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Language Log
"Gentle onsets" are everywhere

President Joe Biden is known for having overcome a serious stuttering problem as a child — see e.g. "Biden’s Stutter: How a Childhood Battle Shaped His Approach to Life & Politics", or "Joe Biden's history of stuttering sheds light on the condition". It also seems clear that the techniques that he developed to overcome the problem are still present in his speech today, as I discussed in "Calling all linguists", 10/21/2023. My conclusion in that article, agreeing with others more knowledgeable than I am, was that the main effect is selective lenition, probably related to what are called "gentle onset" techniques.

But what's less clear is whether this effect is different in kind from things that happen in (almost?) everyone's speech.
We don't need to listen very long to find apparent examples Biden's speech. For example, in second phrase in a recent campaign event in Las Vegas:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

hello hello hello
Pablo thank you ((for the)) introduction http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/BidenThankYouIntroduction.png And in the next phrase, we get

Your browser does not support the audio element.

you know uh
you immigrated to America as a teenager
graduated ((from)) high school ((and)) spent four years ((as)) a union apprentice

Some of the lenited/omitted syllables are in the middle of words — a few seconds later, we get

Your browser does not support the audio element.

…represen((tat))ive Steven Horsford…

Or again:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

…represen((tat))i((ve)) Susie Lee…

Now let's compare the speech patterns of some other public figures, starting with the opening of Rishi Sunak's interview last fall with Elon Musk:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

uh we feel- we feel ver((y)) priv((ileged and)) ver((y)) excited to have you

Zeroing in on the "very privileged and very excited" part:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

Early in Musk's response to the first question, we get

Your browser does not support the audio element.

you know ((the)) poin((t)) a((t)) which someone can see

The first two words are roughly [junoð];

Your browser does not support the audio element.

…and the next two are roughly [poɪnəwɪt͡ʃ];

Your browser does not support the audio element.

For more, let's turn to a LLM's interview with Rishi Sunak and Bill Gates. The AI's second question, read by Gates is:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

What's the most important piece of advice
you've ever received and how's it ((influenced))
your career and approach to life?

Gates' pronunciation of "influenced" is not a lenition, but a regular type of speech error. Perhaps under the influence of the following "your", the final /nst/ of "influenced" palatalizes to [nʃ] — "influensh" in eye-dialect…

Your browser does not support the audio element.

But Gates also give us plenty of  lenitions → omissions, for example in this phrase:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

I was a little too-
I was very intense on myself and I tried to apply that
t((o)) other people and

…where "to other" comes out as [dʌðɚ]:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

Turning back to Elon Musk, here's an answer about advertisers and censorship on X, from Musk's recent interview with Don Lemon. I'll  supply an orthographically full transcription, and let you decode the lenitions for yourself:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

if-
if- if- if given a choice
where
and advertiser is saying like you have to censor all this content ((that-))
on the platform irrespective of where the advertising appears
then o- our answer will be like you-
you- you can choose where you want your advertising-
what you want your advertising [...]

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Advanced English Skills

Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
limo

limousine

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Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
jot down

If you jot something down, you quickly write it down on a pad or piece of paper.

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Word of the Day
Word of the Day: crucial

This word has appeared in 2,489 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?

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Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
knackered (1)

very tired, exhausted

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Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
chat up

to talk to someone in the hope of beginning a romantic relationship with them

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lations with the West," in Victor H. Mair, ed., Contact and Exchange in the Ancient World (Honolulu:  University of Hawaii Press, 2006), pp. 30-61.

* Barry Cunliffe, By Steppe, Desert, and Ocean: The Birth of Eurasia (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 2015)
* "Of precious swords and Old Sinitic reconstructions" (3/8/16)
* "Of precious swords and Old Sinitic reconstructions, part 2" (3/12/16)
* "Of precious swords and Old Sinitic reconstructions, part 3" (3/16/16)
* "Of precious swords and Old Sinitic reconstructions, part 4" (3/24/16)
* "Of precious swords and Old Sinitic reconstructions, part 5" (3/28/16)
* "Of armaments and Old Sinitic reconstructions, part 6" (12/23/17) — particularly pertinent, and also draws on art history as well as archeology
* "Of precious swords and Old Sinitic reconstructions, part 7" (1/11/21) –on the akinakes* (Scythian dagger / short sword) and Xiongnu (Hunnish) horse sacrifice
* "Of felt hats, feathers, macaroni, and weasels" (3/13/16)
* "Horses, soma, riddles, magi, and animal style art in southern China" (11/11/19) — details how the akinakes and other attributes of Saka / Scythian culture penetrated to the far south of what is now China; excessive sacrifices of horses in the south and in Shandong
* "The dissemination of iron and the spread of languages" (11/5/20) — with a lengthy section on the akinakes and its dispersion
* "Indo-European religion, Scythian philosophy, and the date of Zoroaster: a linguistic quibble" (10/9/20) — with an extensive bibliography
* "Of horse riding and Old Sinitic reconstructions" (4/21/19)
* "Of reindeer and Old Sinitic reconstructions" (12/23/18)
* "'Mulan' is a masculine, non-Sinitic name" (7/15/19)
* "Ethnogenesis of the Mongolian people and their language" (8/19/20)
* "Idle thoughts on 'gelding'" (8/3/20)
* "The importance of archeology for historical linguistics, part 3" (6/3/20)
* "The importance of archeology for historical linguistics, part 2" (5/11/20)
* "The importance of archeology for historical linguistics" (5/1/20) — with a list of more than a dozen previous posts related to archeology and language
* "Archeological and linguistic evidence for the wheel in East Asia" (3/11/20)
* "Indo-European 'cow' and Old Sinitic Reconstructions: awesome" (1/16/20)
* "'Horse Master in IE and in Sinitic" (11/9/19)
* "'Horse' and 'language' in Korean" (10/30/19)
* "An early fourth century AD historical puzzle involving a Caucasian people in North China" (1/25/19)
* "Of dogs and Old Sinitic reconstructions" (3/7/18)
* "Of jackal and hide and Old Sinitic reconstructions" (12/16/18)
* "Galactic glimmers: of milk and Old Sinitic reconstructions" (1/8/19)
* "Mare, mǎ ('horse'), etc." (11/17/19)
* "Blue-Green Iranian 'Danube'" (10/26/19)
* "China and Rome" (2/24/19)
* "Old Sinitic reconstructions and Tibeto-Burman cognates" (4/18/16)
* "The 'whole mess' of Old Sinitic reconstruction" (12/14/20) — with scores of relevant posts listed in the "Selected readings"
* Victor H. Mair, “The Horse in Late Prehistoric China:  Wresting Culture and Control from the ‘Barbarians’”, in Marsha Levine, Colin Renfrew, and Katie Boyle, ed., Prehistoric steppe adaptation and the horse, McDonald Institute Monographs (Cambridge:  McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2003), pp. 163-187.
* Victor H. Mair, “Horse Sacrifices and Sacred Groves among the North(west)ern Peoples of East Asia”, Ouya xuekan 欧亚学刊 (Eurasian Studies), 6 (Beijing:  Zhonghua shuju, 2007), 22-53; also available as chapter 11 in Victor H. Mair, China and Beyond:  A Collection of Essays (Amherst, NY:  Cambria, 2013).
* Prods Oktor Skjaervø, "The Horse in Indo-Iranian Mythology", review of Philippe Swennen, "D'Indra à Tištrya: Portrait et évolution du cheval sacré dans les mythes indo-iraniens anciens", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 128.2 (April-June, 2008), 295-302.
* Saikat K. Bose, "The Aśvamedha: in the context of early South Asian socio-political development", Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies, 25.2[...]

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Language Log
China Babel

My basement is full of unpublished manuscripts.  I call it the "Dungeon", because it is dark, dank, and crowded with books and papers — much worse than my office, which has achieved a fabled reputation for its crampedness — and very cold in the winter, though it does have a wonderful bay window on the eastern side where I can look out at the flora, fauna, and foliage to rest my eyes and mind from time to time.

Three of the most significant manuscripts in the Dungeon that remained unpublished for decades are:
1. West Eurasian and North African Influences on the Origins of Chinese Writing (tentative title) has been alluded to on Language Log several times during the last couple of decades, but I began to think about its main themes already in the 70s.  The bulk of the research was done during the 80s, after which I locked it away in a strongbox that I've not touched since them, nor do I have any intention of doing so during the foreseeable future.  Why?  Because the intellectual infrastructure for serious consideration of such a paradigm-shifting work simply does not exist.  Too many, I would even say most, scholars simply cannot accept the possibility of long distance cultural interaction.  Back in the 70s and 80s when I laid out my positions, colleagues would say, "You make an interesting case for convincing parallels at the two ends of Eurasia, but how are they connected in the middle?"

When, in the 90s, I brought the Tarim Basin mummies to the attention of the world and undertook deep, broad research on a wide variety of aspects concerning them, I thought that I had discovered the smoking gun in the center of Eurasia.  Our (including J. P. Mallory, Elizabeth J. W. Barber, Han Kangxin, et al.) archeological investigations were complemented by the remarkable, long-running series of studies on east-west exchanges by Yu Taishan that were carried out primarily with the use of Chinese historical sources, which he plumbed in a thoroughgoing way that had never been done before (many are available in English translations in Sino-Platonic Papers, including book-length volumes).  But that was insufficient for the obdurate skeptics who also demanded that the dots connecting the two ends to the middle be filled in more decisively (though, in truth, we thought we had already gone a long way toward meeting that challenge).

Then, during the 00s, the situation improved markedly.  Andrew Sherratt wrote his seminal "The Trans-Eurasian Exchange: The Prehistory of Chinese Relations with the West", which was published posthumously in Victor H. Mair, ed., Contact and Exchange in the Ancient World (Honolulu:  University of Hawaii Press, 2006), pp. 30-61, that is especially important for the study of the spread of bronze technology from west to east.  A few years later, with a Eurasian-wide purview, the pathbreaking article by Joyce C. White and Elizabeth G. Hamilton, “The transmission of early bronze technology to Thailand: new perspectives”, Journal of World Prehistory 22 (2009), 357–97 (Google Scholar) appeared.

Then came the 10s, which commenced the penetrating studies by Lucas Christopoulos linking up Greek, Central Asian, and East Asian cultural attributes through minute visual and textual comparisons, and the massive treatises of Brian Pellar on the astronomical derivation of the zodiac and writing systems based thereupon.  These researches are bringing us ever closer to the fundamental premises upon which Origins was predicated.

Just this March (2024), while I was preparing this note, two scintillating new works burst upon the scene that tie east and west together more tightly than ever before:

a. Petya Andreeva, Fantastic Fauna from China to Crimea:  Image-Making in Eurasian Nomadic Societies, 700 BCE-500 CE (Edinburgh:  University Press, 2024).

b. Hajni Elias, "The Southwest S[...]

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Idiom of the Day
in all honesty

In one's sincere opinion; without any disingenuousness. Watch the video

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Word of the Day
banneret

Definition: (noun) A knight honored for valor, entitled to display a square banner and to hold higher command.
Synonyms: knight of the square flag.
Usage: The banneret proudly led his troops into battle and pressed forward unafraid.
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Funny Or Die (Youtube)
Before Facebook you had to just text your friends selfies. Or was that just @deadeyebrakeman?


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Word of the Day
Word of the Day: jeer

This word has appeared in five articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?

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Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
footy

Australian Rules Football, Aussie Rules Football

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Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
factor in

to include a certain item when calculating or planning something

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to appear next to
you can't insist of censorship of the entire platform
if you insist on censorship of the
entirely platform
even where your advertising doesn't appear
uh then uh
obviously we won't- we will not uh
want them as an advertiser

It's not easy — this clip sounds roughly like [ɑvsu], but it's really "obviously" (co-articulated with the /w/ of "we"…):

Your browser does not support the audio element.

For lagniappe, here's his response to the follow-up question:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

well first of all uh
almost all of our advertisers are coming back
platform
so it's a very short list of
advertisers who are not coming back ((to the)) platform
um
and uh
our advertising revenue is rising rapidly
uh and
our subscription revenue is rising rapidly,
and I feel very optimistic about the future of the X platform

Obviously there are many dimensions of variation here, and a lot of work to do if we want an accurate picture whose speech is doing what, when, where, and why.

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Idiom of the Day
in a sorry state

In a pitiful or abject condition. Watch the video

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Word of the Day
buskin

Definition: (noun) A foot and leg covering reaching halfway to the knee, resembling a laced half boot.
Synonyms: half boot.
Usage: He wore pale yellow buskins that covered the scars just above his ankles.
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the water holding aloft the hero's sword can also be found in a medieval Chinese tale from Dunhuang. That review is available electronically from ScienceDirect, if your library subscribes to it. Otherwise, I think this version on the Web is a fairly faithful copy.
* Miriam Robbins Dexter and Victor H. Mair, Sacred Display: Divine and Magical Female Figures of Eurasia (Amherst, NY: Cambria, 2010)
* Miriam Robbins Dexter and Victor H. Mair, "Sacred Display: New Findings", Sino-Platonic Papers, 240 (Sept. 2013), 122 pages

[h.t. Wang Chiu-kuei]

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