By Andy Thomason. The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates has announced the sites of the 2016 election’s three presidential debates and one vice-presidential debate. More...
Over Objections, College in Florida Drops Tenure-Like System for New Hires
By Andy Thomason. The State College of Florida will no longer offer continuing contracts to new faculty members, a change strongly opposed by professors at the Bradenton college as well as its president. The Bradenton Herald reports that the college’s trustees voted to end the tenure-like system for new professors, in part, they said, so the college would be able to fire misbehaving professors more easily. More...
Members Only
By William Germano. If you want to speak of someone who has a teaching appointment you might refer to her or him as a faculty member or a member of the faculty.
If it were only that simple.
Since the 12th century, the term faculty has denoted a group, and not any group: a faculty is an indispensable aggregation and organization, the heart of any institution of higher education. More...
Sex and Verbs and Rock ’n’ Roll
By Geoffrey Pullum. Last week I promised to explain why I was recently browsing in a little German grammar book I have owned since 1963. More...
On ‘Diversity’
By Ilan Stavans. I have become allergic to the word diversity. It feels empty, or worse, like a chore. Words lose capital when they are overused or when the cultural climate that fostered their meaning changes. Diversity is a good example. More...
A Healthful Perspective
By Anne Curzan. This past Saturday I was down in Washington, D.C., giving a seminar at the Smithsonian Associates called “Grammatical Gaffes: A Linguist Looks at Language Pet Peeves.” For two hours, almost 200 grammar enthusiasts and I romped through some of the greatest hits of grammatical peevery, such as literally to mean ‘figuratively,’ impact as a verb, could care less, between you and I (or for he and I, etc.), use of less for fewer, stranded prepositions, the existence of irregardless at all, and singular they (a topic on which I have many thoughts, as Lingua Franca readers know). More...
Papal Language
By Allan Metcalf. The occasion of a papal visit brings with it an opportunity to consider certain comfortable words. I use comfortable in its earlier sense, “strengthening or supporting (morally or spiritually); encouraging, inspiring, reassuring, cheering,” to which the Oxford English Dictionary archly adds, “Obs. or arch.” But then the papacy has something arch. about it, though it is certainly not obs. More...
A Million Missing Words: The Search Is On
By Allan Metcalf. They are the dark matter of the lexiverse — a million words of the English language not yet recorded in any dictionary.
Words like these: farecasting, deanling, domainer, hyperloop, unfuckulate, anachronym, smokescreening. More...
Frosh
By Lucy Ferriss. This year, for the first time, I am teaching a freshman — oops, first-year — seminar. Right there is the problem. As readers of this blog know, I like to be on top of the latest gender-neutral neologism. For many years, the term freshman has belonged to a class of designations (fireman, policeman, mailman) for which our culture has tried to find gender-neutral alternatives. More...
A Lesson in ‘Lessen’
By Lucy Ferriss. A few months ago we at Lingua Franca received an email from a suffering reader. His eyes are hurting and his ears are subject to a terrible sound. That sound is the verb lessen. Whatever happened to decrease? our discomfited reader would like to know. More...