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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Modern Times: McJobs, dot-bombs and cell yell, March 7, 2004
This review is from: Word Spy: The Word Lover's Guide to Modern Culture (Paperback)
After nine years of hosting one of the most popular websites on neologisms - words which have entered our vocabularies, but not yet our dictionaries -- Paul McFedries has written a tourist's guide to modern society using new words as signposts. What better indication is there of what is important to us than the new words we create? We live in a world that is more stressed ("road rage", "postal"), older ("boomeritis", "silver ceiling"), and self-consciously materialistic ("metrosexual", "McMansion"). We are also a generation which has incorporated such words of war and destruction as "weapons-grade" into our everyday vocabulary. No wonder some of us are "downsizing", moving "off-the-grid" and reading "comfort books". Paul McFedries is a self-proclaimed "neologophiliac". What he really loves, like H L Mencken, is: "the biology of language, as opposed to its paleantology". Best of all, he is able to express that "irrational exhuberance" in language that is funny and light. There are regular additions to McFedries' collection of new words on http://www.wordspy.com/ .
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tracking the evolution of language, with wit and flair, January 20, 2008
This review is from: Word Spy: The Word Lover's Guide to Modern Culture (Paperback)
For anyone interested in the evolution of language, in particular, with an interest in tracking new words as they enter into the language, Paul McFedries' Wordspy site is an indispensable resource:
[...]
This "book from the site" is hilarious, informative, and entertaining. I highly recommend it.
* multishirking : doing two or more non--work-related tasks at once (e.g. surfing the net while making a personal phone call)
* lactivist : an activist who promotes breastfeeding over use of infant formula
* floordrobe (noun): A pile of discarded clothes on the floor of a person's room.
*carbage (noun): the accumulated garbage, papers, and other assorted detritus that litters one's car after a road trip.
My favorite part was McFedries's discussion of various prefixes (cyber, info, net, e-, techno, eco, bio, Franken, Mc, spokes, meta-,uber) and suffixes (gate, ware, -free, -holic, -ista, meister, a-palooza, -erati, -tainment, -zilla).
A terrifically entertaining book.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great lingui-porn -- not your father's dictionary!, November 1, 2005
This review is from: Word Spy: The Word Lover's Guide to Modern Culture (Paperback)
This nifty little volume is proof that the English language is not only alive, it's kicking butt and taking names. Language junkies are familiar with the author's several dozen books and probably his website and maillist, too (for which he slips in a couple of plugs, but that's okay). What he's interesting in here is the invention (or the organic rise, perhaps) of new words by all parts of society, from teen slang that mostly lasts two weeks to techie terms that have rooted themselves firmly in the wider culture, like "dot-com" or the verb "to google." He avoids stunt words (deliberate cleverness by some writer) and nonce words (which appear only once and die immediately). None of his examples existed before c.1980, and all have established a track record by appearing in a variety of public media. (He's aware of Sniglets, incidently, but points out that not one of those introduced by Rich Hall has actually entered the language.) Some new words are so obvious and so apt once you've heard them, you can't believe no one ever thought of them before. (He describes S. J. Perelman's delight when a mechanic told him his car had been "totaled.") The chapters are organized by source or context -- modern angst, modern politics and war, activism of all flavors, political correctness (itself an apt and sneering recent invention), advertising, the Internet revolution, pop psychology, baby-boom-ism, privacy and security (not to forget 9/11, now an overused shorthand), and even "Dilbert." He gives examples of usage from the media, too, some of which are a hoot. Still, there are gaps in the language for which no word has yet appeared, like a reasonable term for each other by adults who regularly go on dates ("Boyfriend" and "girlfriend" are a bit silly when you're over forty). This book is a great time-sink (that's in here, too), both fun and informative.
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