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Decoder Ring | Mailbag: Drug Names, Cow Abductions, and the “Ass-Intensifier”

Slate Daily Feed

Slate Podcasts

News, Business, Society & Culture

41.1K Ratings

🗓️ 16 July 2025

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode we’re opening our mailbag to answer three fascinating questions from our listeners. How did “ass,” a word for donkeys and butts, become what linguists call an “intensifier” for just about everything? How do pharmaceuticals get their wacky names? And why do we all seem to think that aliens from outer space would travel to Earth just to kidnap our cows? In this episode, you’ll hear from linguistics professor Nicole Holliday, historians Greg Eghigian and Mike Goleman, and professional “namer” Laurel Sutton. This episode of Decoder Ring was produced by Willa Paskin, Max Freedman, and Katie Shepherd. Our supervising producer is Evan Chung. Merritt Jacob is Slate’s Technical Director.  If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, please email us at [email protected], or leave a message on our hotline at 347-460-7281. Get more of Decoder Ring with Slate Plus! Join for exclusive bonus episodes of Decoder Ring and ad-free listening on all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe from the Decoder Ring show page on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Or, visit slate.com/decoderplus for access wherever you listen. Sources for This Episode Bengston, Jonas. “Post-Intensifying: The Case of the Ass-Intensifier and Its Similar but Dissimilar Danish Counterpart,” Leviathan, 2021. Collier, Roger. “The art and science of naming drugs,” Canadian Medical Association Journal, Oct. 2014. Eghigian, Greg. After the Flying Saucers Came: A Global History of the UFO Phenomenon, Oxford University Press, 2024. Goleman, Michael J. “Wave of Mutilation: The Cattle Mutilation Phenomenon of the 1970s,” Agricultural History, 2011. Karet, Gail B. “How Do Drugs Get Named?” AMA Journal of Ethics, Aug. 2019. Miller, Wilson J. “Grammaticalizaton in English: A Diachronic and Synchronic Analysis of the "ass" Intensifier,” Master’s Thesis, San Francisco State University, 2017. Monroe, Rachel. “The Enduring Panic About Cow Mutilations,” The New Yorker, May 8, 2023. A Strange Harvest, dir. Linda Moulton Howe, KMGH-TV, 1980. “United States Adopted Names naming guidelines,” AMA. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

I had the absolute pleasure of speaking to Pamela Anderson.

0:04.2

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to help us improve our relationship with our bodies.

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To find more

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0:48.0

Discover Tommy Hilfiger's limited edition, Apex GP Collection,

0:51.7

inspired by F1, the movie, only in cinema's June 25th.

0:59.7

It has been noted by Stoner movies and people with too much time on their hands that if you say a word enough times in a row, you can make it strange.

1:13.3

I'm not even talking about the obvious words, like arboreal or bureaucracy or water.

1:22.6

But even just like cat.

1:25.4

Cat.

1:27.3

Cat. Cat.

1:28.5

Why is that our word for our most self-possessed house pet?

1:34.3

Sometimes a word doesn't need repetition or narcotics to get weird to you.

1:41.1

In fact, in the odds, a word behaving in a very specific way, jumped out to Eric Schoyer, an

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