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Informal English: Puncture Ladies, Egg Harbors, Mississippi Marbles, and Other Curious Words and Phrases of ...
Jeffrey Kacirk

Touchstone, 2005 - 256 pages

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A flippercanorious hightantrabogus (fine good time)

Kacirk's book rambles through the gambit of American English without focusing on any one region or period. This ensures a varied taste of unique, strange and sometimes very familiar words and expressions. I personally enjoyed discovering terms I've heard my parents use, like "pickaninny," "coffin tacks" or "pig in clover." In this way Kacirik reminds us we're all part of a tradition that includes the unlikely: "flippercanorious" (fine); the sensible: "shouting bee" (religious emotion); and the oddly appropriate: "naked possessor" (squatter). Each word is sourced and Informal English includes an extensive bibliography. A good introduction and the "expert" and usually very funny opinions preceding each entry (I always suspected that the English considered America the "Dark Continent of the World of Words.") give Kacirk's work context. Informative and always entertaining, I highly recommend Informal English.


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No black tie here...

The English language has great diversity, perhaps nowhere as strong and colourful as across the spread of North America, the largest geographic landmass of English-speaking predominance in the world. Like any living language, the 'standard' is not always the one used in everyday speech and communication. The written language itself has differing standards, all at variance in one form or another from the spoken word. Because of this, much of the language gets lost over time. One of the things that makes novelists like Mark Twain memorable is that they captured elements of the informal language, the spoken language, in their text pages - something fairly rarely done, but something that can resonate with the readers.

Jeffrey Kacirk states in his introduction that it is this lost and vanishing element of the language that he concentrates upon for this book - not a surprise, really, given that the title of another of his books is 'Forgotten English'. Part of Kacirk's interest came from his upbringing, in which he lived in several different regions of the country, each geographically and linguistically distinct. Kacirk's introduction traces the development of the language in certain ways, including the fact that what are often considered 'Americanisms' often originated in the British Isles, falling out of use there but thriving in North America. With the advent of modern media (talking motion pictures, radio and television), the re-introduction of American speech patterns as both commonplace and acceptable has occurred, with occasional bumps.

The phrases Kacirk has accumulated here include pieces that contain the flavour of life in North America. 'Often containing an abundance of metaphor, simile, and common sense, these distillations of practical experience are easily bandied about by those whose education has not displaced their native intelligence.' These have a tendency to be blended over time into the mainstream, if they survive at all, particularly in an ever more homogeneous media environment. However, language as a living entity continues to grow in wild patches here and there, and Kacirk's collection helps to show some of the more interesting patches in the garden of the English language.



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Gleaned from antiquated dictionaries, dialect glossaries, studies of folklore, nautical lexicons, historical writings, letters, novels, and miscellaneous sources, Informal English offers a captivating treasure trove of linguistic oddities that will not only entertain but also shed light on America's colloquial past. Among the gems are:

Surface-coal: cow dung, widely used for fuel in Texas

Bone-orchard: in the Southwest slang for a cemetery

Chawswizzled: "confounded" in Nebraskan idiom. "I'll be chawswizzled!"

Leather-ears: to Cape Cod inhabitants, a person of slow comprehension

Puncture lady: a southwestern expression for a woman who prefers to sit on the sidelines at a dance and gossip rather than dance, often puncturing someone's reputation

Whether the entries are unexpected twists on familiar-sounding expressions or based on curious old customs, this wide-ranging assortment of vernacular Americanisms will amaze and amuse even the most hard-boiled curmudgeon.


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