Caption: Shots of pickle juice, known as "picklebacks.", Credit: Michael Williams http://www.flickr.com/photos/mkwilliams/2741757602/ used under a Creative Commons license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en
Image by: Michael Williams http://www.flickr.com/photos/mkwilliams/2741757602/ used under a Creative Commons license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en 
Shots of pickle juice, known as "picklebacks." 

A Way with Words: Picklebacks and Mountweazels (#1275)

Series: A Way with Words
From: A Way with Words
Length: 00:54:00

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This week on "A Way with Words," Martha and Grant talk about phrases you love to hate, like "Do you mind if I put you on hold?" They also talk about mountweazels, jakey bums, picklebacks, and step-ins. And which is the proper term: mothers-in-law or mother-in-laws? Read the full description.
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Piece Description

Some words and phrases you just love to hate: "Your call is important to us." "Do I mind if I put you on hold?" And how about those annoying mid-dinner announcements like "This is a courtesy call"? Martha and Grant talk about some of those phrases and why they make us cringe.

Is it rearing to go or raring to go? Champing at the bit or chomping?

Which is correct: mothers-in-law or mother-in-laws?

A listener from Clifton Park, New York, says her grandfather was a police officer who used the term jakey bum to refer to undesirable characters.

Quiz Guy John Chaneski has a puzzle called "Novel Novels," in which he gives clues to the names of novels similar to familiar ones, except for one letter. Try this one: "This offbeat novel is based on an incident concerning a nudist club and an official at a nearby university." Stumped? Think Norman Mailer's novel with all the fugs in it.

A Woodbridge, Connecticut, caller tells the story of coming across the following definition for jungftak in Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary (1943): "n. A Persian bird, the male of which had only one wing, on the right side, and the female only one wing, on the left side; instead of the missing wings, the male had a hook of bone, and the female an eyelet of bone, and it was by uniting hook and eye that they were enable[d] to fly,--each, when alone, had to remain on the ground." For years, he wondered whether such a bird actually exists. Grant explains that this type of dictionary entry is what lexicographers call a mountweazel--a fake definition used to catch copyright infringers who would take a dictionary's content and publish it as their own.

A Charlottesville, Virginia woman says her husband, a New Yorker, makes fun of her for using the expression might could, as in, "We might could go to dinner later." The hosts talk about this and other double modals. Incidentally, here's the funny clip Martha mentions featuring Rosemary Clooney and Marlene Dietrich singing "Too Old to Cut the Mustard."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kEBlmSX904

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http://tinyurl.com/yf69kqp

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...

CONTACT INFORMATION

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

Backup contact information:
Stefanie Levine
Senior Producer of "A Way with Words"
cell/office (619) 890-4275
slevine@waywordradio.org

Broadcast History

For broadcast starting Friday, July 9, 2010. This episode first aired January 16, 2010.

Transcript

SUMMARY:

Some words and phrases you just love to hate: "Your call is important to us." "Do I mind if I put you on hold?" And how about those annoying mid-dinner announcements like "This is a courtesy call"? Martha and Grant talk about some of those phrases and why they make us cringe.

Is it rearing to go or raring to go? Champing at the bit or chomping?

Which is correct: mothers-in-law or mother-in-laws?

A listener from Clifton Park, New York, says her grandfather was a police officer who used the term jakey bum to refer to undesirable characters.

Quiz Guy John Chaneski has a puzzle called "Novel Novels," in which he gives clues to the names of novels similar to familiar ones, except for one letter. Try this one: "This offbeat novel is based on an incident concerning a nudist club and an official at a nearby university." Stumped? Think Norman Mailer's novel with all the fugs in it....
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:

This week on "A Way with Words," Martha and Grant talk about phrases you love to hate, like "Do you mind if I put you on hold?" They also talk about mountweazels, jakey bums, picklebacks, and step-ins. And which is the proper term: mothers-in-law or mother-in-laws?

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 Josette Herdell and Jennifer Powell. Recorded at Studio West in Rancho Bernardo, California, and at KQED Radio in San Francisco.

Related Website

http://www.waywordradio.org/