engskills | Education

Telegram-канал engskills - Advanced English Skills

28487

#ielts #toefl #gre #english_vocabulary #english

Subscribe to a channel

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
More (dis?)fluent interpolations

(…and also more /bl/ lenition…)

For the latest problematic clip from J.D. Vance's past, see Hafiz Rashid, "J.D. Vance Bashed Immigration With Podcast Host Who Advocated for Rape", TNR 8/15/2024:

J.D. Vance’s 2021 appearance on a podcast episode is drawing some negative attention thanks to the extremist views of its host, as well as Vance’s own comments.

The podcast, Jack Murphy Live, interviewed Vance before his run for the Senate in Ohio. The host Jack Murphy, whose real name is John Goldman, has a history of expressing abhorrent views on rape and immigration.

In one since-deleted blog post, Murphy wrote that “behind even the most ardent feminist facade is a deep desire to be dominated and even degraded,” adding that “rape is the best therapy for the problem. Feminists need rape.” […]

Vance’s comments on Murphy’s podcast also decried what he believed were the negative aspects of immigration.

“You had this massive wave of Italian, Irish, and German immigration right? And that had its problems, its consequences,” Vance told Murphy. “You had higher crime rates, you had these ethnic enclaves, you had inter-ethnic conflict in the country where you really hadn’t had that before.”

The story has also been picked up by at least one overseas outlet so far — Alana Loftus, "JD Vance blames higher crime rates on 'wave of Irish immigration' in resurfaced clip", Irish Star 8/15/2024. But this is Language Log, not Political-Self-Foot-Shooting Log, so my focus will be on the some characteristics of how Vance talks in that podcast, not on the political content.
The source of the fuss is a tweet by Jacqueline Sweet, viewed 2.7 million times so far:

JD Vance in 2021, while discussing earlier waves of immigration to the US:

"You had this massive wave of Italian, Irish and German immigration and that had its problems, its consequences. You had higher crime rates, you had these ethnic enclaves, you had inter-ethnic conflict in… pic.twitter.com/SQNPwaPBLx

— Jacqueline Sweet (@JSweetLI) August 15, 2024
yeah you know I- I think it's one of those things that's evolved over time, right
so- so obviously you had this massive wage-
wave of Italian- primarily (like-) Italian uh Irish and German immigration, right
and- and- and that had- had it's problems
right it- it had its consequences you had
higher crime rates, you had these sort of ethnic enclaves developing
you had inter-ethnic conflict in the country where you really hadn't had that ((before))

The main thing that struck me (linguistically) about this clip was the rapidly-repeated phrase-initial words — for some past discussion, see "Fluent 'disfluencies' again" (9/3/2022) and the posts linked therein.

But transcribing the passage, I was also struck by the pronunciation of "problems", which is reduced to (something close to) a single phonetic syllable — reminiscent of the things happening to /b/-initial syllables in (some performances of) "Probably":

Your browser does not support the audio element. http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/Vance2021ImmigrantsX1.png Zeroing in on the performance of "problems":

Your browser does not support the audio element.

This "fluent disfluency" is not an isolated phenomenon — another semi-random sample, starting around 25:22.6 in the same interview:

Your browser does not support the audio element.

right I mean that I think that there- there are two different ideas here right
so- so one is- is like
you know I- I-
there's this guy Curtis Yarvin
who's written um about some of these things
and so- so one is to basically accept
that this entire thing is going to fall in on itself right

Let me make clear that I'm not criticizing J.D. Vance's speech style. Most people exhibit similar behavior — and as I noted about one of the speakers quoted in "Fluent 'disfluencies' aga[...]

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
Word of the Day: inordinate

This word has appeared in 43 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: Giant killing – AFCON 2023 Group Stage Review

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football: Shithousery

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2024 FA Cup Third Round

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Language: Confederation

confederation: In this football language post we explain the term 'Confederation' which are the organisations in charge of governing football

The post Football Language: Confederation appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football: Clear Cut

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: Injury Crisis

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Language Podcast: November International Break & Rattle the Crossbar

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Language: To be at it

In this football language post we explain the expression 'to be at it' which is used when a player or a team are playing really well.

The post Football Language: To be at it appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2023 Copa Libertadores Final Review – Fluminense v Boca Juniors

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Language Expression: Challenge

In this football language post we look at some of the meanings of the word 'challenge' in football including one connected to tackling another player.

The post Football Language Expression: Challenge appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Glossary: Orange Card

When we use the phrase 'an orange card', we believe a tackle is between a yellow card and a red card. The tackle is bad and could be a red.

The post Football Glossary: Orange Card appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: Liverpool and Tottenham 2023-24 Season Preview

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2023 September International Break

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
Nagoya Dialect and the Marvel Cinematic Universe

[This is a guest post by Frank Clements]

I saw something about Japanese dialects recently that might interest you. The makers of the Marvel movies are trying to recover the enthusiasm that's been lost due to their more recent films being critically panned and scandals with major actors, so they're introducing the classic Marvel villain Dr. Doom, who is traditionally the main villain of the Fantastic Four (created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee). They've brought back Robert Downey Jr. to play him, even though he's already played Iron Man, and they haven't explained how that is going to work.
But what's interesting from a Japan perspective is that a Fantastic Four cartoon by Hanna-Barbera that first ran in the US from 1967 to 1968 was then dubbed and shown on Japanese TV in 1969. They made the choice to give Dr. Doom (Akuma-hakase 悪魔博士 in Japanese) a comical Nagoya accent, so many Japanese associate the character with funny, hard-to-understand Nagoya-ben. Here's a short Youtube video by NONNON, a Japanese woman who reviews American cartoons, that first informed me about it. According to her, many people on Japanese social media were posting about it after the announcement.

I lived in Nagoya for a semester in college, but I never really picked up the dialect (which seems to be largely in decline, especially compared to dialects like Osaka-ben). Nathan Hopson worked there for a few years, so he may have encountered more of it in the wild, so to speak. It makes the character of Dr. Doom a lot more comical to the Japanese, which contrasts with Marvel's push to make him the new overarching villain for their cinematic universe. Maybe when they dub the movies into Japanese, they'll try to work in an in-joke referencing it all.

[end of guest post]
Selected readings

* "'Come to Nagoya' — spatial locutions" (8/17/20)
* "Tesseract Space Stone" (6/15/21)

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football: (to) Lump

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Predictions Competition: AFCON 23 and ASIAN Cup 23

The 2023 AFCON and Asian Cup tournaments are now at the last 16 stage and the Languagecaster team is organising a Predictions Competition.

The post Predictions Competition: AFCON 23 and ASIAN Cup 23 appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Language: AFCON

In this football language post we explain the term 'AFCON' which is the name of the main tournament for national sidesA in Africa.

The post Football Language: AFCON appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Football English Language: Thunder

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2023 FIFA Club World Cup

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2023-24 Champions League Group Stage Review

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2023 Man City v Liverpool (Mis-hit Clearance)

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Language: Rescue a point

In this football language post we explain the expression 'to rescue a point' which is when a team draws a game thanks to a late goal.

The post Football Language: Rescue a point appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: Fortress

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football: Bundle Home

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football: The Toffees

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football: Orange Card

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: Piano Carrier

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football
Football Language Expression: Wipe the floor

In this football language post we explain the expression 'to wipe the floor with' which is used to describe when one team thrashes another...

The post Football Language Expression: Wipe the floor appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…
Subscribe to a channel