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Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

92: Brunch, gonna, and fozzle - The smooshing episode

Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne

Science

4.8743 Ratings

🗓️ 17 May 2024

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sometimes two words are smooshed together in a single act of creativity to fill a lexical gap, like making "brunch" from breakfast+lunch. Other times, words are smooshed together gradually, over a long period of speakers or signers discovering more efficient ways to position their mouth or hands, such as pronouncing "handbag" being pronounced more like "hambag". In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne get enthusiastic about smooshing words together. We talk about the history of portmanteau words like motel and chortle, the poem Jabberwocky, and why some portmanteaus, like Kenergy from Ken + energy, sound really satisfying, while others (wonut??) just don't catch on at all. We also talk about words becoming more efficient to produce over time, like how a path can be gradually created through many people choosing the same route through a field, such as "going to" becoming "gonna" or the historical forms of ASL "remember" and French "aujourd'hui". Read the transcript here: lingthusiasm.com/post/750684727053352960/transcript-episode-92-smooshing Announcements: In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about secret codes and the word games we create based on them!! We talk about using alternate symbols to encode messages like in semaphore, Morse code, as well as repurposing existing symbols like the Caesar cipher, ROT13, and cryptoquote puzzles. We also talk about cryptic crosswords, which aren't technically a kind of cryptography but were used to recruit codebreakers for Bletchley Park in World War II, as well as Navajo, Choctaw, and other Native American code talkers who used their language skills to transmit messages in both world wars that were much harder to crack than a mere cipher. Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 80+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds. Find us here: www.patreon.com/posts/103457404 For links to things mentioned in this episode: lingthusiasm.com/post/750684590310555648/lingthusiasm-episode-92-brunch-gonna-and-fozzle

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Linkheasism, a podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics.

0:22.0

I'm Gretchen McCulloch.

0:23.3

And I'm Lauren Gorn, and today we're getting enthusiastic about smushing words together.

0:28.0

But first, our most recent bonus episode was about secret codes, ciphers, Hildegard von Bingen,

0:34.3

cryptography, cryptic crosswords, and Morse code romance. And you can listen to it

0:39.3

at patreon.com slash Lingthusiasm. Also on Patreon, we have 80 plus other bonus episodes on things

0:47.4

like swearing and linguistics in fiction and other behind the scenes things from Linkusiasm.

0:54.3

Bonus episodes are around the same length as main episodes, but we sometimes do slightly

0:58.8

different things like a deep dive into a single academic paper or AMAs and updates on our

1:04.3

other projects, and sometimes we get a little bit silly.

1:08.0

We run on the direct support of our listeners, which means we don't have to run

1:10.9

ads. So if you'd like to help us keep existing and making these free episodes for everyone,

1:15.9

we'd really appreciate it if you'd consider becoming a patron. Or if you were a patron for a while

1:20.6

and you had to leave for a bit, we'd also love to see you back. There are more bonus episodes for you

1:25.0

to enjoy now.

1:38.0

Music There are more bonus episodes for you to enjoy now. Gretchen, I have some words that are made up of two other words, and I'm going to make you guess what the other two words are

1:45.7

that they're made up from. Okay, sounds fun. Our first word is motel. Ah, this one I know,

1:53.1

this is a motor hotel. It is indeed because you can drive your car all the way up to the door of

1:59.2

your room. Absolutely. And I assume

2:01.6

this was invented around when the car became popular, I guess. Yeah, I had thought that it was

2:06.3

maybe like a mid-century thing in the 50s or 60s when cars really took off, but apparently

2:11.8

the earliest citation is from 1925. Huh, that is earlier than I thought it was. Yeah.

...

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