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Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report
 
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Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report [Hardcover]

Susie Dent (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0198610122 978-0198610120 December 23, 2004
This new edition of The Language Report covers all aspects of contemporary English as an evolving and mutating language. Slang, text, music, politics, idioms, and the media all contribute to changing the English we speak. This volume aims to chronicle this shapeshifting language over through its recent history, and with a special emphasis on 2004.

A collection of some of the most intriguing facts and observations on spoken and written English today, this volume makes for excellent browsing. The fascinating development of euphemisms is covered, from sacking to halving the footprint, by way of making redundant and downsizing. New words are an essential part of this book, from the brand new 'intextication' to 'sexiles' and 'gangmasters'.

Larpers and Shroomers examines the newest words in the language, and looks at the influence of current events, politics, and the media on everyday vocabulary, explains trends in grammar, and includes memorables quotes of the year.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

`Review from previous edition 'the language report' 'is a breathtaking guided tour of the state of the English language in 2003'' Daily Express 5/11/03

`The 'book gives a thoroughly entertaining and informative look at the way our language is constantly evolving.'' Daily Express 5/11/03

`'Susie Dent's 'the language report' combines a journalist's eye for recent quotes, slang, and coinages with a scholar's sense of the growth of English as a global family of tongues.'' The Independent

`Dent's survey of contemporary word usage is lively' Time Out

`punchy themed chapters' The Guardian

About the Author


Susie Dent is and editor and translator. She appears regularly on the popular British game show "Countdown" as the quiz's resident dictionary expert.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 174 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (December 23, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0198610122
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198610120
  • Product Dimensions: 7.7 x 5.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,956,681 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cool, Nifty, Keen, Hip, March 1, 2005
This review is from: Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report (Hardcover)
It was ghetto fabulous in 1996, and it was green in 1971. In 1961 it was awesome, and in 1956 it was sexy. In 1948 it was cool but in 1926 it was kitsch. In 1904 it was hip. These are in a list of buzzwords for each of the last hundred years, each of which showed up for the first time in that year, or was used for the first time in a special context, like "sexy" used for "interesting". The year-by-year listing, admittedly subjective because there are so many new words being formed every year, appears in _Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report_ (Oxford University Press) by Susie Dent, a snapshot of our vivaciously growing English language. While there are those who would favor some sort of language police and a recall to some mythical golden age when grammar was universally used, words were not fads, and meaning was unvarying, Dent's book shows that this never will happen and never has. A funny volume, with chapters on the newest language of business, food, politics, sport, and more, the book will please anyone interested in words, and increase any reader's vocabulary, but perhaps only with ephemerally useful phrases. After all, not all the words here are quite tiddly-om-pom-pom (1909).

New words are largely reinventions, like "sexy" for "interesting." In the _Oxford English Dictionary_, which is of course referred to here often, one percent of the words are completely new, the rest being adaptations of some older form, or blends. There are some new coinages that are borrowings of a fashion anyone would recognize, like adding "chic" to a word (as in "shabby-chic"). The snapshot of language here reflects that because of completely new interests (like computer role-playing games), new media for language spread, and the adaptation of English in other countries and cultures, this is a particularly colorful time for word changes. If you like computer games or role-playing games, you may be a "gamer", for instance, but if you prefer your role-playing to be in the flesh, you are a "larper," one who enjoys Live Action Role Playing games. (The other word in the book's title, shroomer, means one who uses hallucinogenic mushrooms, or more innocently, one who gathers wild mushrooms for the table.) As shown in many chapters, the new words are not at all slang, but there is a chapter specifically about slang, with a whole page devoted to the noun, adjective, and verb "bling". Even "post-bling" is now being used.

American readers should know that _Larpers and Shroomers_ concentrates some of its pages on new British terms with which not even the hippest American will be familiar. Most of the book, however, reflects new forms of the language with which the world is doing most of its business and writing most of its web pages. It is thus a useful work for anyone who uses the language. Browsers are apt to pick up some lively new words, but also learn about some that are not so new; "Generation X" actually dates from 1952, for instance. Here you can learn about "dord", the infamous "ghost word" that was in the 1934 Webster's but wasn't a word at all; it had been on an index card that said "D or d" as the abbreviation for density, and "dord" was given the meaning "density". It had a short life of its own, appearing in other dictionaries that used Webster's as a source. It's a curious story in an entertaining book about a curious language that is always newer than anyone knows.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Slightly nerdy but tremendously entertaining., March 28, 2005
This review is from: Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report (Hardcover)
Susie Dent harvests a load of linguistic produce that's green, overripe and everything in between.
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