sauvagenoble.blogspot.com
sauvage noble: APA 2009 (Philadelphia): SSGLLL Call for Papers
http://sauvagenoble.blogspot.com/2008/01/apa-2009-philadelphia-ssglll-call-for.html
An Austronesian’s Adventures in Altertumswissenschaft and Indogermanistik. APA 2009 (Philadelphia): SSGLLL Call for Papers. We were just in Chicago, but we must now think of Philadelphia:. GREEK AND LATIN LINGUISTICS. Sponsored by The Society for the Study of Greek and Latin Languages and Linguistics; Jeremy Rau. Harvard University and Benjamin W. Fortson. PDF] Please send three copies of the abstract by February 1, 2007. Department of the Classics. Cambridge, MA, 02138. Links added; emphasis mine.).
sauvagenoble.blogspot.com
sauvage noble: Golden Line in Prose
http://sauvagenoble.blogspot.com/2008/02/golden-line-in-prose.html
An Austronesian’s Adventures in Altertumswissenschaft and Indogermanistik. Golden Line in Prose. Or, “when a student of linguistic structures in poetry reads prose”. So, I’m teaching letters of Cicero and Pliny the Younger this quarter, and I was struck by the final sentence of Pliny 1.6.3. I’m not sure whether this has been pointed out before (tacet Sherwin-White ad loc.), but . First, note the word order. The indirect statement opens with the negative adverb. As four cretics, bookended by. In other new...
sauvagenoble.blogspot.com
sauvage noble: Euripides’ Helen
http://sauvagenoble.blogspot.com/2008/02/euripides-helen.html
An Austronesian’s Adventures in Altertumswissenschaft and Indogermanistik. My friend and colleague Mary-Kay Gamel. An adaptation of Euripides’. For the modern stage. It runs Friday–Sunday, 29 February–2 March, and Thursday–Sunday, 6–9 March. Shows are at 7:00 pm (3:00 pm on Sundays) at the Mainstage Theater. Campus. The Saturday shows on 1 and 8 March will be followed by talk-backs. Tickets are available on line at SantaCruzTickets. 321 with Helene Foley. On modern stagings of Greek drama, Ruby Blondell.
sauvagenoble.blogspot.com
sauvage noble: VII diebus
http://sauvagenoble.blogspot.com/2008/10/epsilonlambdapiiotasigma.html
An Austronesian’s Adventures in Altertumswissenschaft and Indogermanistik. Ldquo;Septem diebus, praeferamus spem metui, concordiam disiunctioni, mutationem promissam perstanti statui rerum. Septem diebus, una conveniamus una res publica, unusque populus, et iterum malimus meliora de nobis narretur”—B. Obama, 27 October 2008, Canton, Ohio. And extra-curricular pursuit of these. Golden Line in Prose. APA 2009 (Philadelphia): SSGLLL Call for Papers. On the Archimedes Palimpsest. APA 139, Chicago, Day 0.
biloklok.blogspot.com
piloklok: english with an accent
http://biloklok.blogspot.com/2008/07/english-with-accent.html
English with an accent. On Linguist List is a companion website for English with an Accent. By Rosina Lippi-Green. I use this text as primary reading in a class I teach called Language and Society, whose focus is on addressing issues of folk linguistics. Posted by Bob Kennedy @ 11:14 AM. At Wed Apr 01, 06:08:00 AM 2009. Nice information, thanks. Perniagaan Internet Rahsia Internet Cari Duit Diinternet Pemasaran Internet Cari Duit Online. At Wed Aug 12, 03:33:00 AM 2009. James from spaans spanje. I have p...
biloklok.blogspot.com
piloklok: first voice to break the sound barrier
http://biloklok.blogspot.com/2007/03/first-voice-to-break-sound-barrier.html
First voice to break the sound barrier. Not sure how long this link. Maybe this is precisely the kind of catchy analogy I need for my own research. Athletes Get Nicknames Like Comic Book Heroes. Prefixes Regenerate Like Rabbits. Posted by Bob Kennedy @ 8:37 AM. Santa Barbara, California, United States. View my complete profile. Tenser said the Tensor. There's a pattern here to see. Random data point: double object particle verb. More linguistics fun from Alanis. Oh, the profanity! And what about gyros?
biloklok.blogspot.com
piloklok: I'll be here all week
http://biloklok.blogspot.com/2007/03/ill-be-here-all-week.html
I'll be here all week. Just a few linguisticky jokes to pass the time. What did the causative say to the reflexive? Posted by Bob Kennedy @ 5:22 PM. At Fri Mar 16, 11:40:00 AM 2007. I love that knock-knock joke. Did you see this. Turtles all the way down! At Thu Apr 12, 09:30:00 AM 2007. That would also be a good knock knock joke for a programmer. :). Santa Barbara, California, United States. View my complete profile. Tenser said the Tensor. There's a pattern here to see. More linguistics fun from Alanis.
biloklok.blogspot.com
piloklok: dropping by
http://biloklok.blogspot.com/2008/01/dropping-by.html
Wow, it's been quite a while since I posted anything here - for a variety of reasons no doubt. Though I can update that an unintended consequence of piloklok is near fruition - the recurring topic of language and sports, that basically got rolling for me here, is now about to emerge as a full-blown undergrad class. At UCSB. This quarter it's listed as a special topics course, so enrollment is low, but we'll have it on the books for future years as well. I'll update on its progress whenever I can. If Fred...
biloklok.blogspot.com
piloklok: September 2005
http://biloklok.blogspot.com/2005_09_01_archive.html
Some note of the broadcasting. Of NMSU football games. In Navajo has been making the rounds, first at Semantic Compositions. And now Eric at Language Log. Naturally it's tempting for the media to frame this as a "(no) word for X" story. Which is too bad given that there's so much meatier stuff to play with: like, is the 4th person (i.e. obviative) structure useful at all in play-by-play? SC also links to this article. Butterfly ball" rather than le knuckleball. Part of its abstract from LLBA:. Fortunatel...
biloklok.blogspot.com
piloklok: August 2005
http://biloklok.blogspot.com/2005_08_01_archive.html
In a continuing quest. For lexical items that cross over sports, I have resorted to reading summaries of tennis matches, which has me slapping my forehead for not having noticed the use of. Tennis, cards, dice, golf, and beyond. But this one's trajectory is not at all obvious, since it's associated with games whose origins are far more ancient than those that give us home runs and touchdowns. OED puts the earliest use of. As the side of a die with one point value, and tracing the word from Old French.