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(wow) Words Of Wonders Level 168 Answers

(wow) Words Of Wonders Level 168 Answers – Today’s episode is a little different. A few months ago I was a guest on the Ologies podcast, a horror show where Alie Ward is funny and happy and eager to interview a kind of scholar – bisonologist, bisonologist, ludologist, video game, Thanatology Corvid – Crow Funerals !

Alie interviewed me as an etymologist, and I’m not an etymologist, just an amateur – the definition of amateur is a lover, which is also appropriate. We cover words including buxom, mediocre, coccyx, lacuna, and some broader things about my approach to language.

(wow) Words Of Wonders Level 168 Answers

Helen Zaltzman: No, actually, it’s not one of the common mistakes. But they saw Z and were shocked.

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HZ: Well, I speak Zed when I’m in a Zed-speaking country. But I’m in your field, so I translated it.

HZ: Oh, yes. So, okay, here’s my part of when I’m in the states. If it’s another word like Zed/Zee or Coriander/Cilantro, I’ll say another word. But it’s hard for me to use the correct American pronunciation when it’s one word. So it’s hard for me to say tomato because it sounds wrong when I say it. I can’t do it right. My mouth won’t be in the right American shape to make the right words.

ASIDE: As a quick aside, the word tomato comes from Nahuatl, the language of the former Aztec Empire, for “swollen fruit.” And therefore, tomatoes are what people hot girls in the 1920s. Linguists think this is because of thick, juicy.

HZ: I remember first being interested in languages ​​when I was young. I mean, seven. I went to a very old school, so I learned French and Latin when I was young. I’m like, “Oh, that word sounds similar to this word in English.” And, it’s like you see

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So, it’s like, “Ahhh, I wonder what these things have to do with each other.” And I grew up in a wordy family. I am the youngest. I was an accident. There was a short time between me and my brother and sister who were both brilliant and well spoken. And I just thought, if I’m going to say something, I’ve got to bring my A game. It’s just kind of living from a young age to be verbal.

HZ: I don’t know, because I don’t think anyone cares. But apparently I’m a fast reader. My mother

I was a reader at first, but I remember he taught me to read. So, I think before I just look at a book that looks like reading.

HZ: Yes, I have these pink plastic glasses. And then sometimes they put a cloth over one eye to strengthen the other eye. But they put it in my eye, but removing it was very painful. It’s a good time.

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HZ: It’s like a kid who looks like an angry old man, he looks like an old codger, maybe?

ALIE WARD: Yes! I think as an old man in diapers and a pacifier is not cute, but when you are behind, it is beautiful. you know

ALIE SIDE: OK, so a few words have been added to the OED this year, from, yes, TGIF, burkini, and hate. Some interesting options.

HZ: No, because I think it’s mostly a press game, isn’t it? Because they just want to annoy people with it, over and over again.

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HZ: Yes, I like the recognition that many dictionaries have taken in the age of social media. Most of them have very salty Twitter accounts.

HZ: And you have learned some good words, but the dictionary type, there is a limit to the number of words that can be put in it. Therefore, one must go. It is difficult to enter words, but there are many places on the Internet for them to follow these words, and something that can be useful only for a short time, like “On fleek” that quickly enters the dictionary, but it is. it is not. It must be there if it’s just a few years of misery.

HZ: I was just saying in quotation marks. I never managed to articulate it.

ALIE WARD: Yes, we all are. Now there is something about the elasticity of language? I feel like we all love ecology, but is your interest rooted in human behavior and how we store things?

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HZ: Yes, my interest is more in human behavior. And I think that’s what made me like ecology in the first place is that a lot of it is stupid and you can see these signs of how people did it hundreds of years ago. Therefore, there are many mistakes in the way words are developed. It doesn’t need a reason. And I think that’s the appeal, that they are not straight paths. Another thing I learned about doing the show is that I’m not a screenwriter. I was such a walker when I was a kid. It’s just a dream, especially with my mom. But it is not sustainable. If you know

Everything about the way of language, you can’t maintain it because there are so many things against it. And there is a lot of mental distortion if you want to maintain your pedantry. But after a while I was like, “You’re taking on a lot of unnecessary anger. You don’t have to.” So, that was a nice surprise, I guess. It’s just an adjustment to how language is constantly evolving and changing, especially English. That has evolved faster than other languages ​​that have a similar preservation interest. But if you know English, you’re like, “Oh, that’s what happened.” People use it the way they want to use it. Therefore, when there is a gap, people fill in the word that they have decided to use in a different way or they invent it.

A lot of it is driven by this kind of need. You can’t control it. And while it doesn’t necessarily make sense, it doesn’t. You may not like it, but you have to understand that this is a language process.

ALIE WARD: Now, what is it about the English language that makes it change so quickly? And he also studied Latin, do you see where we take our roots? Latin? From Greek?

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HZ: Oh, English is an interesting language, that’s why it’s so interesting. It is also a problem that has more to do with later history. Therefore, the English type comes out very messy. There was an indigenous language in the British Isles, but then there was the Roman invasion, which I think was 50 BC. And then the German army attacked around 500 AD. And then the Vikings. And then in 1066, the Normans. So you get a lot of French influence but also a lot of Latin through French. And so, at that time, you have the official language in Latin, but then the posh language is French. And then the general public still speaks Anglo-Saxon, the German version of Anglo-Saxon. And then it merges into Middle English, which becomes Modern English.

So, I think about 70% of English words have Latin roots, but most Latin roots are either from Greek or not directly from the Romans. And then to find what I call “British Foreign Policy Enthusiast”. World and stick our dicks in them.

HZ: Yes, so English appeared in many different places, but we found words in those places and brought them back. or we returned what we got as potatoes and so the word is It happens tons. You find this very ridiculous. While in French, you also have a French language school. They decide if you are allowed gender neutral pronouns or whatever. They don’t like that. It is very sexist language. While English does not have that control and has resisted that control. They tried and it didn’t work.

ALIE WARD: And when it comes to finding the root of something, what’s the most surprising, or what’s your favorite definition? Because there is a story behind them all.

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HZ: Yes, it’s even sad. Often the story is “we don’t know.” The road is not very far. I like the etymology of the word ‘average’.

HZ: I will be

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