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A Way with Words - language, linguistics, and callers from all over

Like a Boss (Rebroadcast) - 6 August 2012

A Way with Words - language, linguistics, and callers from all over

A Way with Words

Society & Culture, Language Learning, Education

4.6 • 2.3K Ratings

🗓️ 6 August 2012

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s witches’ knickers! What do you call stray plastic bags that litter the landscape? Also, what it means to do something like a boss, how to hyphenate correctly, and why we say we have a crush on someone. Also, similes from the 1800s and the truth about what happens when a bull is loose in a china shop. Hear hundreds of free episodes and learn more on the A Way with Words website: https://waywordradio.org. Be a part of the show: call or text 1 (877) 929-9673 toll-free in the United States and Canada; elsewhere in the world, call or text +1 619 800 4443. Send voice notes or messages via WhatsApp 16198004443. Email words@waywordradio.org. Copyright Wayword, Inc., a 501(c)(3) corporation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to Away With Words. I'm Grant Barrett. And I'm Martha Barnett.

0:04.2

You ever notice how if you're running errands all day and you're not careful, you can end up with a big handful of those annoying plastic bags?

0:11.9

Even if you're thoughtful enough to plan ahead and take a canvas tote bag on your shopping trip, there's still no escaping them.

0:18.6

If you look around, you see them everywhere, floating along in the breeze, caught in the fence, flapping lazily in a tree, or maybe there's a bag lying by the curb, collecting water as you're stepping over it. But my question, of course, is do we have a term for those escaped plastic bags out in the environment? Should we have a term? Well, we do have some

0:37.8

terms, at least in different parts of the world, a few years ago I discovered that in Ireland,

0:42.5

they sometimes call them witches knickers. Which is knickers? You can just imagine white underpants

0:47.3

hanging from a tree, right? Yeah, yeah, magically appearing. Sometimes they've been called baghawks.

0:53.9

Because they just float up high in the sky, right? And a number of Appearing, yeah. Sometimes they've been called baghawks. Baghawks.

0:54.4

Because they just float up high in the sky, right?

0:57.3

And a number of different places, if you look in the newspaper archives, you will see that in this campaign to rid certain communities of these disposable bags, people will say they're so common that they're almost our second state bird.

1:10.8

Or they're so common, they look like our state flower. Right. The state flower of X or the national flower of this or that country. Yeah, I've also seen shoppers, kites, and you mentioned hawks. I've seen retailed hawks. Retailed hawks, knights. As opposed to red-tailed. I think my favorite, I i like witch's britches although i know that's

1:29.3

not really common right witch's knickers is a little common but the rhyme is nice isn't it yeah but i

1:33.5

like urban tumbleweed as well oh urban tumbleweed yeah very good well you know my problem in my house

1:39.8

is we reuse these bags all the time we put kitty litter in them or or just things that need to be wrapped up extra tight in the trash can.

1:47.1

But now we're at the point where the recycled bags that are made from recycled plastic,

1:52.0

the promotional bags that you get at conferences, or they cost a quarter at the register

1:56.2

and the ones that you're supposed to reuse.

1:57.8

Now I have 40 of those.

2:00.2

And there's no way I'm ever going to use 40 of these recycled bags, right?

2:04.0

And I can't really justify throwing them away.

2:06.4

Right.

2:06.9

Well, there is a woman in Santa Barbara who takes them to Africa, to Tanzania, where there's a real

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