Houston Chronicle
01 Apr 2013
PRWeb . April 1, 2013 ... Tweet ... The words themselves range from commonplace—like biscuit, a twice-baked cake for Roman soldiers—to loanwords including “chaparral,” from the Basque shepherds who came to the American West; words from myths, such as “hector;” metamorphosis words, like “silly,” which evolved from “holy” to “goofy” in a mere thousand years; and words well worthy of revival, such as “carrytale,” a wandering storyteller ... Tweet ... ....(size: 6.7Kb)
All Africa
17 Mar 2013
[Daily Trust]8. Buffet. This is another French loanword in English that retains its original French pronunciation....(size: 0.5Kb)
Wall Street Journal
17 Jan 2013
In the event, British Prime Minister David Cameron postponed the speech he was scheduled to deliver on Britain's relationship with the European Union in The Hague on Friday morning because of the developing crisis in Algeria ... Cameron's concerns? It seems with a mixture of Schadenfreude—that useful loanword from German that describes pleasure derived from the misfortune of others—and trepidation ... Schadenfreude because Mr ... 1946. U.K ... 1961 ... ....(size: 8.5Kb)
San Francisco Chronicle
08 Dec 2012
(PRWEB) December 08, 2012 ... The Painted Word ... The words themselves range from the commonplace, such as biscuit, a twice-baked cake for Roman soldiers, to loanwords like chaparral, courtesy of Basque shepherds who came to the American West; from word-reversals such as silly, which evolved from "holy" to "goofy" in a mere thousand years, and to words well worthy of revival, such as carrytale, a wandering storyteller ... H....(size: 2.8Kb)
The Times of India
28 Nov 2012
LONDON. An eminent former editor of the Oxford English Dictionary attempted to rewrite it by deleting thousands of words with foreign roots, including those of Indian-origin, a new book claims ... She compared Burchfield's four OED dictionaries published between 1972 and 1986 to a 1933 edition and found that he had erased 17% of the 'loanwords'. ....(size: 2.1Kb)
Deccan Herald
28 Nov 2012
for too many British words in the dictionary and not enough foreign words! ... She compared Burchfield's four OED dictionaries published between 1972 and 1986 to a 1933 edition and found that he had erased 17 per cent of the 'loanwords' and world English words that had been included by editor Charles Onions, who included 45 per cent more foreign words than Burchfield. ....(size: 2.4Kb)
The Times of India
28 Nov 2012
LONDON ... for too many British words in the dictionary and not enough foreign words! ... She compared Burchfield's four OED dictionaries published between 1972 and 1986 to a 1933 edition and found that he had erased 17 per cent of the 'loanwords' and world English words that had been included by editor Charles Onions, who included 45 per cent more foreign words than Burchfield. ....(size: 2.4Kb)
Houston Chronicle
27 Nov 2012
The strange case of the word thief. Tuesday, November 27, 2012 ... ... ... She found that, far from opening up the OED to foreign linguistic influences, Burchfield had deleted 17% of the “loanwords” and world English words that had been included by Onions, who included 45% more foreign words than Burchfield ...