Caption: Parrot in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain., Credit: Licensed from http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en and taken by http://www.flickr.com/photos/sd-6/797697780/ Manuel Marín.
Image by: Licensed from http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en and taken by http://www.flickr.com/photos/sd-6/797697780/ Manuel Marín. 
Parrot in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain. 

A Way with Words: Tweet, Tweet! Polly Wanna Cracker! (#1254)

Series: A Way with Words
From: A Way with Words
Length: 00:53:58

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Twittering, tweeting, twirting– it's rare to see a whole new body of language appear right before your eyes. But that's what's happening with Twitter. Grant and Martha discuss the snappy new shorthand of the twitterati. Also, why do people feel compelled to say "Polly wanna cracker?" whenever they see a parrot? And is it ever okay to end a sentence with a preposition? Read the full description.

Parrot Summary:

Twittering, tweeting, twirting, tweeple – it's rare too see a whole new body of language appear practically before your eyes. But that is what's happening with the microblogging community called Twitter. Grant and Martha discuss the snappy new shorthand used by the twitterati, and the creativity demanded by a messaging medium of 140 characters or less. Also, why all the parroting of "Polly wanna cracker?" around parrots? They settle the question of whether you can end a sentence with a preposition.

For a closer look at the language of the twitterati, check out Erin McKean's recent piece in the Boston Globe.

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/02/08/all_a_twitter/

A man who owns a parrot says that when people see his bird, they invariably ask the question "Polly wanna cracker?" He wonders about the origin of that psittacine phrase. Psittacine? It means parrot-like. http://www.bartleby.com/61/21/P0632100.html

Is it ever okay to end a sentence with a preposition? Oh, is it ever! Martha and Grant do their best to bury this tired old proscription. It's a baseless rule concocted by 17-century grammarians, and it's errant nonsense up with which your hosts will not put.

Quiz Guy Greg Pliska has a puzzle in which participants try to guess a word that could logically go before or after each of a trio of words. For example, if the three words are "nest," "calories," and "suit," the answer is "empty," as in "empty nest," "empty calories," and "empty suit." So, can you guess why Greg calls this puzzle "Crown Play Time"?

Is it more correct to say "toward an object" or "towards an object"? The answer depends on which side of the Atlantic you're on.

Martha tries out a couple of old-fashioned riddles on Grant. Here's one: "What goes around the world, but stays in a corner?"

An F-18 fighter pilot worries that a term he and his colleagues often use isn't a legitimate word. It's deconflict, which means to ensure that aircraft aren't in the same airspace. Grant reassures him that deconflict is a perfectly respectable term.

Is there a word for @#$%!^*)!&!, those typographical symbols standing in for profanity? There is indeed. It's grawlix-- not to be confused with jarns, quimps, nittles, lucaflects, or plewds. For more on such terms, check out cartoonist Mort Walker's Private Scrapbook. http://tinyurl.com/damste

Grant answers a letter from a listener who wonders if it's ever correct to use the word "fishes" instead of "fish."

In this week’s round of Slang This!, a member of the National Puzzlers League tries to separate the real slang terms from the fake ones. For example, which of following expressions is British rhyming slang for "wife": boiler house or the stitches? And which of these is prison slang for "cake" or "candy": cho-cho or grimpen mire?

It's one of those things that are inevitable as death, taxes, and come to think of it, people saying "Polly wanna cracker?" whenever they see a parrot. We're talking, of course, about the nasty black mixture of snow and ice that builds up in your car's wheel wells in wintry weather. Is there a word for this frigid gunk? Various names have been floating around, including hunkers, snared, grace, curricles, or snort. A caller shares another her own family uses, braxis.

If people are on warmly congenial terms, they're said to "get on like a house on fire." Yet an Irishwoman says when she uses this expression in the U.S., she often gets puzzled looks. Is the expression that unusual?

When something's crooked, some people describe it as catawampus, or catawampus, or catawampus. Ditto for something located diagonally across from something else. A caller wonders about the historical roots of all these words. Anything to do with felines?

CONTACT INFORMATION

Grant Barrett
Co-host, "A Way with Words"
http://waywordradio.org
cell/office (646) 286-2260
gbarrett@worldnewyork.org
words@waywordradio.org

Backup contact information:
Stefanie Levine
cell/office (619) 890-4275
slevine@waywordradio.org

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Piece Description

Summary:

Twittering, tweeting, twirting, tweeple – it's rare too see a whole new body of language appear practically before your eyes. But that is what's happening with the microblogging community called Twitter. Grant and Martha discuss the snappy new shorthand used by the twitterati, and the creativity demanded by a messaging medium of 140 characters or less. Also, why all the parroting of "Polly wanna cracker?" around parrots? They settle the question of whether you can end a sentence with a preposition.

For a closer look at the language of the twitterati, check out Erin McKean's recent piece in the Boston Globe.

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/02/08/all_a_twitter/

A man who owns a parrot says that when people see his bird, they invariably ask the question "Polly wanna cracker?" He wonders about the origin of that psittacine phrase. Psittacine? It means parrot-like. http://www.bartleby.com/61/21/P0632100.html

Is it ever okay to end a sentence with a preposition? Oh, is it ever! Martha and Grant do their best to bury this tired old proscription. It's a baseless rule concocted by 17-century grammarians, and it's errant nonsense up with which your hosts will not put.

Quiz Guy Greg Pliska has a puzzle in which participants try to guess a word that could logically go before or after each of a trio of words. For example, if the three words are "nest," "calories," and "suit," the answer is "empty," as in "empty nest," "empty calories," and "empty suit." So, can you guess why Greg calls this puzzle "Crown Play Time"?

Is it more correct to say "toward an object" or "towards an object"? The answer depends on which side of the Atlantic you're on.

Martha tries out a couple of old-fashioned riddles on Grant. Here's one: "What goes around the world, but stays in a corner?"

An F-18 fighter pilot worries that a term he and his colleagues often use isn't a legitimate word. It's deconflict, which means to ensure that aircraft aren't in the same airspace. Grant reassures him that deconflict is a perfectly respectable term.

Is there a word for @#$%!^*)!&!, those typographical symbols standing in for profanity? There is indeed. It's grawlix-- not to be confused with jarns, quimps, nittles, lucaflects, or plewds. For more on such terms, check out cartoonist Mort Walker's Private Scrapbook. http://tinyurl.com/damste

Grant answers a letter from a listener who wonders if it's ever correct to use the word "fishes" instead of "fish."

In this week’s round of Slang This!, a member of the National Puzzlers League tries to separate the real slang terms from the fake ones. For example, which of following expressions is British rhyming slang for "wife": boiler house or the stitches? And which of these is prison slang for "cake" or "candy": cho-cho or grimpen mire?

It's one of those things that are inevitable as death, taxes, and come to think of it, people saying "Polly wanna cracker?" whenever they see a parrot. We're talking, of course, about the nasty black mixture of snow and ice that builds up in your car's wheel wells in wintry weather. Is there a word for this frigid gunk? Various names have been floating around, including hunkers, snared, grace, curricles, or snort. A caller shares another her own family uses, braxis.

If people are on warmly congenial terms, they're said to "get on like a house on fire." Yet an Irishwoman says when she uses this expression in the U.S., she often gets puzzled looks. Is the expression that unusual?

When something's crooked, some people describe it as catawampus, or catawampus, or catawampus. Ditto for something located diagonally across from something else. A caller wonders about the historical roots of all these words. Anything to do with felines?

CONTACT INFORMATION

Grant Barrett
Co-host, "A Way with Words"
http://waywordradio.org
cell/office (646) 286-2260
gbarrett@worldnewyork.org
words@waywordradio.org

Backup contact information:
Stefanie Levine
cell/office (619) 890-4275
slevine@waywordradio.org

1 Comment Atom Feed

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Fun show for language lovers

My wife and I like your show very much. It is irreverent and light-hearted without being devolving into silliness. It is educational, too.

Broadcast History

For broadcast starting Friday, July 3, 2009. This episode first aired February 27, 2009.

Transcript

Summary:

Twittering, tweeting, twirting, tweeple – it's rare too see a whole new body of language appear practically before your eyes. But that is what's happening with the microblogging community called Twitter. Grant and Martha discuss the snappy new shorthand used by the twitterati, and the creativity demanded by a messaging medium of 140 characters or less. Also, why all the parroting of "Polly wanna cracker?" around parrots? They settle the question of whether you can end a sentence with a preposition.

For a closer look at the language of the twitterati, check out Erin McKean's recent piece in the Boston Globe.

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/02/08/all_a_twitter/

A man who owns a parrot says that when people see his bird, they invariably ask the question "Polly wanna cracker?" He wonders about the origin of that psittacine phrase. Psittacine? It means parro...
Read the full transcript

Timing and Cues

The show clock:

Billboard: 1:00
Segment 1: 13:00
Music Bed: 1:00
Segment 2: 19:00
Music Bed: 1:00
Segment 3: 19:00
TRT: 54:00

Stations typically take NPR news at the top of the hour and start our
show at :06 with Breaks at :19 and :39 and out at :59.

Here's a typical episode rundown:

--Billboard
--Seg 1
----Intro: 2-3 minutes
----Caller questions: 10-11 minutes
--Break 1:00
--Seg 2
----Word Challenge 4-6 minutes
----Caller questions 13-15 minutes
--Break 1:00
--Seg 3
----Slang Quiz 5-7 minutes
----Caller questions 11-13 minutes
----Credits: 1:00

Intro and Outro

INTRO:

Twittering, tweeting, twirting– it's rare to see a whole new body of language appear right before your eyes. But that's what's happening with Twitter. Grant and Martha discuss the snappy new shorthand of the twitterati. Also, why do people feel compelled to say "Polly wanna cracker?" whenever they see a parrot? And is it ever okay to end a sentence with a preposition?

OUTRO:

Additional Files

Additional Credits

Hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett. Produced by Stefanie Levine. Engineered and edited by Tim Felten. Production assistance by Michael Bagdazian and Josette Herdell. Recorded at Studio West in Rancho Bernardo, California, and at the Argot Network in New York City.

Related Website

http://www.waywordradio.org