The Allusionist

Adventures in language with Helen Zaltzman. TheAllusionist.org

http://theallusionist.org/

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 21m. Bisher sind 212 Folge(n) erschienen. Alle zwei Wochen gibt es eine neue Folge dieses Podcasts.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 3 days 11 hours 51 minutes

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51. Under the Covers – part II


Does the available vocabulary for sex leave something to be desired? Namely desire? (And also the ability to use it wthout laughing/dying of embarrassment?) Aiding in the search for a better sex lexicon – sexicon – are Kaitlin Prest of fellow Radiotopi...


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 February 21, 2017  15m
 
 

50. Under the Covers – part I


Escape into the loving embrace of a romance novel – although don’t think you’ll be able to escape gender politics while you’re in there. Bea and Leah Koch, proprietors of America’s sole romance-only bookstore The Ripped Bodice,


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 February 8, 2017  17m
 
 

49. Bonus 2016


Why is gaslighting ‘gaslighting’? What do bodily fluids have to do with personality traits? Why does ‘cataract’ mean a waterfall and an eye condition? And do doctors really say ‘Stat!’ or is that just in ER? To round off 2016,


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 December 30, 2016  17m
 
 

48. Winterval


There’s a word that has become shorthand for ‘the war on Christmas’ with a side of ‘political correctness gone mad’: Winterval. It began in November 1998. Newspapers furiously accused Birmingham City Council of renaming Christmas when it ran festive ev...


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 December 6, 2016  12m
 
 

47. The Year Without a Summer


Today: a tale of darkness, gathering storms, and a terrifying creature that resembles a human man… No, nothing topical: it’s The Year Without A Summer, the story of how Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein. This piece first appeared on Eric Molinsky’s excel...


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 November 21, 2016  20m
 
 

46. The State Of It


Each of the 50 states in the USA has its own motto. The motto might be found on the state seal, or the state flag; more often than not, it might be in Latin, or Spanish, or Chinook; it might be a phrase or a single word.


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 November 4, 2016  19m
 
 

45. Eponyms II: Name That Disease


If you love eponyms like Roman Mars loves eponyms, I’m afraid physician Isaac Siemens is here to deliver some bad news: medics are ditching them, in favour of terms that a) contain information about what the ailment actually is,


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 October 17, 2016  18m
 
 

44: This Is Your Brain On Language


What is your beautiful brain up to as you comprehend language? Cognitive psychologist Jenni Rodd takes a peek. Visit http://theallusionist.org/brain for more information about this topic. Find me at http://twitter.


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 October 3, 2016  12m
 
 

43. The Key part II: Vestiges


If you don’t have a Rosetta Stone to hand, deciphering extinct languages can be a real puzzle, even though they didn’t intend to be. They didn’t intend to become extinct, either, but such is the life (and death) of languages.


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 September 20, 2016  12m
 
 

42. The Key part I: Rosetta


Languages die. But if they’re lucky, a thousand-odd years later, someone unearths an artefact that brings them back to life. Laura Welcher of the Rosetta Project shows us the Rosetta Disk, a slice of electroplated nickel three inches in diameter that b...


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 September 7, 2016  14m