Language Log

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Language Log is a popular collaborative language blog maintained by University of Pennsylvania phonetician Mark Liberman.

The site is updated daily at the whims of the contributors, and most of the posts are on language use in the media and popular culture. Google search results are frequently used as a corpus to prove points about language. Other popular topics are the descriptivism/prescriptivism debate and linguistics-related news items. The site has also occasionally held contests in which visitors attempt to identify an obscure language.

Language Log is now one of the most popular linguistics blogs in the blogosphere. As of January 2007, it receives an average of over 6,000 visits per day.[1] In May 2006, a compilation of posts by Liberman and Pullum was published in book form by William, James & Co., under the title Far from the Madding Gerund and Other Dispatches from Language Log (ISBN 1-59028-055-5).

Contents

Language Log's main page
Language Log's main page

Language Log was started on July 28, 2003 by Liberman and Geoffrey Pullum, a linguist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. One early post about a woman who wrote egg corns instead of acorns led to the coinage of the word eggcorn to refer to that sort of sporadic or idiosyncratic re-analysis. Another post about commonly recycled phrases in newspaper articles, e.g. "If Eskimos have N words for snow, X surely have Y words for Z", resulted in the coinage of the word snowclone. Both phenomena are common topics at the blog.

The blog has a few bugaboos or pet obsessions, including the difficulty of transcribing spoken utterances accurately, the writing style of Dan Brown, shortcomings in the hugely popular style guide The Elements of Style by E. B. White and William Strunk Jr., and the pedantry of book copyeditors. In addition, the site has undertaken a veritable campaign against the notion, related to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, that vocabulary patterns within a language have deep psychological significance for the culture that speaks that language. Their constant debunking of the original snowclone mentioned above has been rather effective in this regard. Another common topic on the blog is how taboo language is handled in the media. Regular contributor Arnold Zwicky has recently written a series of posts describing which words are considered obscene in various publications, and he has paid particularly close attention to the way these words are "asterisked" in the different media forms.

In addition to Liberman and Pullum, a number of other linguists have contributed to Language Log:

  1. ^ Language Log's Sitemeter stats

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