Wednesday 20 June 2007

Mother Tongue

This is the first time I've contributed to the CNG Lending Library blog so I just thought I'd share what I'm reading.
I'm about a third of the way through Bill Bryson's Mother Tongue. Anyone who has read Bill Bryson before knows his work is always an entertaining read, and this book in particular is of interest to all my fellow wordsmiths (in fact it's a must-read) - it basically goes into all the intricacies of the English language. Anyone who wishes to borrow it is welcome to do so when I'm done. Here's a passage with which to leave you:

"Even when you strip out its obsolete senses, round still has twelve uses as an adjective, nineteen as a noun, seven as a transitive verb, five as an intransitive verb, one as an adverb and two as a preposition. But the polysemic champion must be set. Superficially it looks a wholly unassuming monosyllable, the verbal equivalent of a single-celled organism. Yet it has 58 uses as a noun, 126 as a verb, and 10 as a participal adjective. Its meanings are so various and scattered that it takes the Oxford English Dictionary 60,000 words - the length of a short novel - to discuss them all. A foreigner could be excused for thinking that to know set is to know English."

5 comments:

shiny said...

That's fantastic. Here was me thinking the most useful word in the english language was four letters beginning with f.

Dave said...

There's a chapter on swearing too, but I'm not up to it yet. I'll be sure to post a passage from the swearing chapter when i get to it.

my name is kate said...

Welcome Johnsy. I've never got into Bryson but people keep recommended him so I really should give it a crack...

Bolton said...

Actually I read that book and I was absorbing information until he said a few things about the Australian vernacular and stopped and thought "hang on, that's not right".
A notion which was followed up with "well if that's not right, what else is not right?".
And I went off it a bit.

Dave said...

I haven't reached that point yet. I will keep an eye out for it.