Friday, March 23, 2007
I've noticed a big jump in the number of people who title themselves "principal." These are not administrative heads of schools, but architects, financial consultants, and other non-educational jobs. What's so attractive about being a principal?

( words )

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Think of a different word whenever you want to label something controversial. I'm kind of thinking it's a weasel word.

( words )

Monday, October 29, 2007

Can we all agree not to use the word unleashed in reference to things not on leashes?

( words )

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

I have invented a term for a design pattern I have found frequently in my house: load-bearing trim.

( words | house )

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

brownberry, [broun'-bār-ē], -verb (intransitive), -berr·ied, -berry·ing.

  1. to use an Internet-connected messaging device while moving one's bowels: Elzar brownberried in the upstairs bathroom to help pass the time while he processed his lunch.

( words )

Monday, April 07, 2008

I've always found it awkward to describe ratios as "n times fewer." Having a multiple when describing a smaller value doesn't seem right. For example, if one value is 2 and the other is 8, one might describe the first value as 4 times fewer. I've always preferred saying it one fourth as much, or describing the second value as 4 times more.

Actually, I don't like that either because of the use of "more" and "fewer." Those seem additive and subtractive rather than multiplicative. Consider "20 oz more." That means adding 20 oz to whatever the base amount is. "4 times more" implies you have your base to which you add 4 times the base, for a total of 5 times the base. I'm sure that is at least occasionally the intent, but it doesn't appear to be the usual meaning when using that phrase.

I prefer using "as much" instead, which is multiplicative rather than additive. "4 times as much" is clearer. That's another reason why "4 times fewer" seems awkward; you take 4 times your base and subtract it, leaving -3, which usually makes no sense at all.

( words | numbers )

Friday, April 18, 2008

When someone gets a gender-neutral gift for your older daughter so that it can also later be used by your younger son.

( words )

Sunday, April 20, 2008

It's "yin and yang," not "ying and yang."

( fyi | words )

Thursday, April 24, 2008

I have no news or analysis to add to recent reports of dangers from certain kinds of plastics used in food and beverage containers. However, I do have a linguistic contribution to make that I am rather proud of: polydeathylene.

( words | science! )