Episode 23 - Gareth Carrol episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 11, 2022 · 49 MIN

Episode 23 - Gareth Carrol

from Lexis · host lexispodcast

Show notes for Episode 23 Here are the show notes for Episode 23, in which Jacky, Dan, Lisa and Matthew talk to Dr Gareth Carrol of Birmingham University about his new book, Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics and about modern idioms - where they come from, how they work and how they spread into popular discourse. Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics: modern idioms and where they come from website: Jumping sharks and dropping mics from Iff Books Modern Idioms on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Modern_Idioms Gareth Carrol on Twitter: https://twitter.com/garethcarrol Dan was out of practice and forgot to send Gareth our usual quickfire questions so here are his answers: Favourite book – “Through the Language Glass” by Guy Deutscher. It’s a really accessible take on the Language and Thought (Sapir-Whorf) debate, with some fascinating evidence and examples. Honourable mention goes to “Is That a Fish in Your Ear? The Amazing Adventure of Translation” by David Bellos. Favourite fact / idea – that being bilingual is the norm, not the exception in the world (over half the world’s population speaks more than one language). Advice to a budding linguist – be as flexible as you can in how you think about language (and anything else really). There is so much room for fuzziness/variation/ambiguity in how we think about language, and seeing it in these terms (rather than trying to be too rigid and look for clean answers) is a great help in understanding the whole picture. For anyone who hasn’t heard the expression ‘as bent as a nine bob note’: https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/as+bent+as+a+nine-bob+note Lang in the News Accents Customer asks for refund from York Theatre Royal because actors performed play in Yorkshire accents Child refugees in city to learn Hull accent and sayings including 'larkin out' Big piece about accents in The Times in March What does your accent say about you? | Times2 | The Times Several related stories, some featuring criticism of Amanda Cole and her Essex colleagues: Their blog here: Ask or aks? How linguistic prejudice perpetuates inequality | Blog | University of Essex University specialists say there is no such thing as 'correct' language and terminology | Daily Mail Online https://twitter.com/DrAmandaCole/status/1506182631783866368 LBC Vanessa Feltz interview with Amanda Cole: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p0bqyvm6 (from 02:16:30 onwards) Ann Widdecombe in the Daily Express linked here: https://twitter.com/EngLangBlog/status/1506727875134869514 "ACCORDING to academics at the University of Essex there is no such thing as correct language, pronunciation or terminology. Instead they advocate what amounts to linguistic anarchy with anything acceptable such as pronouncing "ask" as "aks" and dismiss any standardisation of usage as "prejudice". Unfortunately for the students, employers who are looking for articulate applicants with a good command of the language will be perfectly happy to exhibit such prejudice and to choose someone who does not use "like" a dozen times in almost as many words." Anti-Welsh accent prejudice here: https://twitter.com/ElunedAnderson/status/1506015005027807237 Contact us @LexisPodcast. Subscribe: Lexis Podcast | Podcast on Spotify Contributors Matthew Butler Twitter: https://twitter.com/Matthewbutlerwy Lisa Casey blog: https://livingthroughlanguage.wordpress.com/ & Twitter: Language Debates (@LanguageDebates) Dan Clayton blog: EngLangBlog & Twitter: EngLangBlog (@EngLangBlog) Jacky Glancey Twitter: https://twitter.com/JackyGlancey Music: Freenotes End music: Serge Quadrado - Cool Guys Cool Guys by Serge Quadrado is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. From the Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/serge-quadrado/urban/cool-guys

Show notes for Episode 23 Here are the show notes for Episode 23, in which Jacky, Dan, Lisa and Matthew talk to Dr Gareth Carrol of Birmingham University about his new book, Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics and about modern idioms - where they come from, how they work and how they spread into popular discourse. Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics: modern idioms and where they come from website: Jumping sharks and dropping mics from Iff Books Modern Idioms on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Modern_Idioms Gareth Carrol on Twitter: https://twitter.com/garethcarrol Dan was out of practice and forgot to send Gareth our usual quickfire questions so here are his answers: Favourite book – “Through the Language Glass” by Guy Deutscher. It’s a really accessible take on the Language and Thought (Sapir-Whorf) debate, with some fascinating evidence and examples. Honourable mention goes to “Is That a Fish in Your Ear? The Amazing Adventure of Translation” by David Bellos. Favourite fact / idea – that being bilingual is the norm, not the exception in the world (over half the world’s population speaks more than one language). Advice to a budding linguist – be as flexible as you can in how you think about language (and anything else really). There is so much room for fuzziness/variation/ambiguity in how we think about language, and seeing it in these terms (rather than trying to be too rigid and look for clean answers) is a great help in understanding the whole picture. For anyone who hasn’t heard the expression ‘as bent as a nine bob note’: https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/as+bent+as+a+nine-bob+note Lang in the News Accents Customer asks for refund from York Theatre Royal because actors performed play in Yorkshire accents Child refugees in city to learn Hull accent and sayings including 'larkin out' Big piece about accents in The Times in March What does your accent say about you? | Times2 | The Times Several related stories, some featuring criticism of Amanda Cole and her Essex colleagues: Their blog here: Ask or aks? How linguistic prejudice perpetuates inequality | Blog | University of Essex University specialists say there is no such thing as 'correct' language and terminology | Daily Mail Online https://twitter.com/DrAmandaCole/status/1506182631783866368 LBC Vanessa Feltz interview with Amanda Cole: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p0bqyvm6 (from 02:16:30 onwards) Ann Widdecombe in the Daily Express linked here: https://twitter.com/EngLangBlog/status/1506727875134869514 "ACCORDING to academics at the University of Essex there is no such thing as correct language, pronunciation or terminology. Instead they advocate what amounts to linguistic anarchy with anything acceptable such as pronouncing "ask" as "aks" and dismiss any standardisation of usage as "prejudice". Unfortunately for the students, employers who are looking for articulate applicants with a good command of the language will be perfectly happy to exhibit such prejudice and to choose someone who does not use "like" a dozen times in almost as many words." Anti-Welsh accent prejudice here: https://twitter.com/ElunedAnderson/status/1506015005027807237 Contact us @LexisPodcast. Subscribe: Lexis Podcast | Podcast on Spotify Contributors Matthew Butler Twitter: https://twitter.com/Matthewbutlerwy Lisa Casey blog: https://livingthroughlanguage.wordpress.com/ & Twitter: Language Debates (@LanguageDebates) Dan Clayton blog: EngLangBlog & Twitter: EngLangBlog (@EngLangBlog) Jacky Glancey Twitter: https://twitter.com/JackyGlancey Music: Freenotes End music: Serge Quadrado - Cool Guys Cool Guys by Serge Quadrado is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. From the Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/serge-quadrado/urban/cool-guys

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Episode 23 - Gareth Carrol

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Lexis Language Center 帰国子女英語・大人英会話・子供英語教室 吉祥寺&三鷹 東京 レクシス Lexis 帰国子女・大人・子供英会話 レクシス吉祥寺三鷹東京 English Language Stories from 子ども大人帰国子女英会話 吉祥寺三鷹東京英語教室レクシスについてwww.lexis.co.jp真剣に学ぶこと、そして、楽しく続けること。それがなによりも大切であると、私たちレクシスは考えています。レクシス・ランゲージ・センターは、ある大手英会話スクールで教えていたネイティブ講師たちが独立してつくった学校です。私たち講師陣は米国で教師の資格を持つ者を含め、小、中、高校生の指導に精通したプロフェッショナルです。大学教授やディベート指導を専門とする講師も在籍しております。講師たちは25年以上にわたる経験に加え、新たな知識や技術も継続的に取り入れ指導しています。私たちは、自分たちで考え続けてきた方法で、自分たちが思い描くとおりに英会話を学んでもらえる、自分たちの学校がほしかったのです。レッスン料も3 カ月ごとの学期制にするなど、いつでも生徒さんのことを考えて工夫しています。私たちの喜びは、なによりも生徒さんの英会話が上達すること。そして、一緒に楽しい時間を過ごすことです。ここ吉祥寺の英語教室は、とてもアットホームです。帰国子女英会話・帰国子女英語塾ご検討の方々も対応できます。ぜひ一度、ご見学にいらして下さい。 NightVision Techno PODCAST by Sade Rush Sade Rush If you want to send me a promo techno track (NOT MIX!), please send it to [email protected]! Thank you! ;)NIGHTVISION TECHNO PODCAST TRAILER:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=khWacGxm3xU&feature=youtu.beTECHNO DJ's from all over the world:Monococ (DE), Atze Ton (DE), Ortin Cam (BEL), Steam Shape (HU), Kühl (HU), Chriss Ronson (HU), Reset (HU), Poulos (HU), Dave Blunt (HU), Ruiz Sierra (HU), Patrik Skoog (DE), [Wex 10] (FRA), Brian Burger (FRA), LXS aka Lexis (SLO), Andreas-Tek (COL), Kastis Torrau (LT), Primal Beat (ITA), G-Man aka Gez Varley (UK), Kostas Maskalides (GRE), Natalino Nunes (FRA), Irregular Synth (ITA), Mateo & Spirit (HUN), Plankton (FRA), Candy Cox (BRA), Chris Jansen (NL), Stevie Wilson (UK), DJ Budai (HUN), Boriqua Tribez (AUT), Marika Rossa (UKR), Mystic (HR), Oliver Lieb (DE), Dandi and Ugo (ITA), Hertz (SWE), MiniCoolBoyz (ITA), Steve Stoll (USA), RVDE (ITA), Hollen (ITA), Damon Wild (PL), Deh-Noizer (ITA), Ranieri aka Mario Ranieri (AUT), Miss Kosmix (UK), R LEXOGRAMM LEXOGRAMM Hi! My name’s Olga Lexis. I’m a professional English Teacher for Russian students. I’ve been teaching English for 13 years and now I understand that students need good vocabulary lists as every language consists of the words, first of all.So, in my podcast I share the English words, collocations, phrasal verbs with Russian translation and I also provide the written version of podcast for your own notes. Back 2 U – Music Hangs & Records We Love Music Is My Sanctuary Every month, Lexis welcomes record collectors, DJs, and artists for a friendly music hangout. In a format inspired by the DJ Back-to-Back, the selections go back and forth between the host and guests, sharing meaningful records and the personal stories behind each of them. A pillar of the Montreal scene, Lexis is the founder of the Music Is My Sanctuary website/collective and the 24 Hours of Vinyl worldwide event series.

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This episode was published on April 11, 2022.

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Show notes for Episode 23 Here are the show notes for Episode 23, in which Jacky, Dan, Lisa and Matthew talk to Dr Gareth Carrol of Birmingham University about his new book, Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics and about modern idioms - where they come...

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