Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
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RADIO: "A Way with Words" - New Program on NCPR (North Country Public Radio)
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Actually, 750,000 words doesn't sound like too many, when you think about it. That solves the mystery of a strange phenomenon for me. Often while I'm watching TV and typing at the same time, I'll hear the word I'm typing being said on the TV at exactly the same moment. I thought that was spooky until our son explained that the odds are good for that to happen, since there is a limited amount of words in the language and certain words are bound to come up at the same time quite often.
Thanks for the link to Carlin's "Brain Droppings". I see that the Goodreads description calls Carlin a "sarcastic semanticist". LOL He sure is... or was. Too bad he's passed on.

There are a lot of problems in counting words:
- Is does one word? "He does the dishes." or "It was a herd of deer with 15 does & 1 buck."
- Do derivations count as separate words or not? 'Duck' & 'Ducks' are one word, but what about 'sing', 'sung' & 'sang'? Certainly 3 different entries in the dictionary or they're impossible to look up, but are they one or 3 words?
- When is a slang word part of the language & does it ever leave? It may fall out of common usage, but still be in a lot of written material.
- Are acronyms words? Some get into common usage as slang: "I need more RAM." is an understandable & oft used phrase meaning a person needs more memory, but is RAM a real word or not?
- Specialty words for specific jobs/disciplines & new items. These often cross language lines, too. They borrow our words, we borrow their's - who do they belong to? When are they considered a word in any language? How long do they have to last? (The word 'floptical' comes to mind.)
I've seen the average 'normal usage' words for an adult English speaker put as low as 5,000 words. Other places will say 10 times that (50,000) as 'active' words (commonly used) with as much as twice as many 'passive' words (understood, but not commonly used) for a vocabulary larger than some languages (150,000).
A decent dictionary easily has 50,000 words & a really good dictionary over 500,000 - for English. No other language comes close, from what I can tell. French is trying to legislate a 'pure' language of about 100,000 words, I think. German is 2 or 3 times as big.
It's funny how little we know or agree on about such a fundamental item as our vocabulary. No wonder we can't communicate.

Interesting analysis, Jim.
One of the books on my To-Read Shelf is:
_The Stuff of Thought Language as a Window into Human Nature_ by Steven Pinker.
From the GR book description:
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"The result is a fascinating look at how our words explain our nature. What does swearing reveal about our emotions? Why does innuendo disclose something about relationships? Pinker reveals how our use of prepositions and tenses taps into peculiarly human concepts of space and time, and how our nouns and verbs speak to our notions of matter."
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The book seems to combine two of my favorite subjects: Words and Psychology.

Pinker's book really does look interesting. I've added it to my wish lists, but it looks as if it is very popular. Maybe some day I'll get it.
It is an interesting subject & the primary reason I oppose multiple official languages in this country. How can we function as a country if we have no common basis for communication - translations being extremely poor, even in closely related languages.
I've read several SF books that have dealt with the subject to some degree. It is fascinating.

Jim, I would oppose multiple official languages too.
I wonder what countries have them.


Jim, I didn't know that! Sheesh!

Oh & I think of analysis as putting facts into a comprehensible order for better understanding. I know few 'facts' about the English language & less about American - which doesn't seem to differentiated, even though spellings vary between Great Britain English & American English. All I know is that a quick search turned up more questions than answers. The few 'facts' turned out to be soft - mushy as an old banana. More like guesses & most weren't all that well educated.

for better understanding."
Jim, I see what you mean.
Questions, instead, are a form of TRYING to analyze. :)
"Judge a man by his questions rather than by his answers." -Voltaire
"Intelligence is not always knowing the answer.
It is always asking the question." -Maya Angelou

I've also been told that New Zealand has three: English, Maori and NZ Sign language.
I found all this out by consulting with my UK newsgroup. (g)

I like a martini
two at the very most
three, I'm under the table
four, I'm under my host.
That's 'nuff said for today...nina

She is credited with having said:
"If all the girls at Vassar were laid end to end, I wouldn't be at all surprised."
Perhaps she got the idea from George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) who said:
"If all economists were laid end to end, they would not reach a conclusion."
As for Einstein, he was full of insights, wasn't he.
Yes, he valued imagination, as your quote shows.
Along those same lines, he also said:
"When I examine myself and my methods of thought, I come to the conclusion that the gift of fantasy has meant more to me than any talent for abstract, positive thinking.”
-Albert Einstein
My MIL was a doer. She said she just couldn't sit around and do nothing. While on the other hand, I can sit and ruminate for days! As you can well imagine, we didn't have much in common. :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature (other topics)Brain Droppings (other topics)
I just happened to tune into it today. Very interesting and fun to listen to.
See the following links: ====>
http://www.waywordradio.org/
http://www.northcountrypublicradio.or...
The program's website says:
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"A Way with Words" is a lively hour-long public radio show about the English language. Co-hosts Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett take calls from listeners about linguistic disputes, grammatical pet peeves, the origins of words and phrases, and curious regional expressions."
"William Safire calls the program "entertainingly erudite" in the New York Times."
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The current schedule shows the program airing on Mondays from 1PM to 2PM EST.