Authorisms: Words Wrought by Writers (29 page)

BOOK: Authorisms: Words Wrought by Writers
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.
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———, ed.
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American Tramp and Underworld Slang: Words and Phrases Used by Hoboes, Tramps, Migratory Workers and Those on the Fringes of Society, with Their Uses and Origins, with a Number of Tramp Songs.
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.
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———,
More First Facts
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!”
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———. “  ‘Household Words’: Common and Uncommon Words Coined by Shakespeare, Part II.”
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Notes

 

introduction

 

1.
    Arthur Plotnik, “Shall We Coin a Term? When No Other Word Will Do, Maybe a Neologism Will,”
Writer,
Dec. 2003.

2.
    Logan Pearsall Smith,
Milton and His Modern Critics
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1940), 54.

3.
    
Guardian, Jan. 27, 2008, A-3.

4.
    Ben Crystal,
Shakespeare on Toast: Getting a Taste for the Bard
(London: Icon Books Ltd., 2010), 11.

5.
    Brenda James,
The Truth Will Out: Unmasking the Real Shakespeare
(New York: Harper Perennial, 2007), 7.

6.
    “[W]hen I happened to be writing about lacrosse in Manchester, England, I worked in the word ‘Mancunian’ three times in one short paragraph. It was the second-best demonym I’d ever heard, almost matching Vallisoletano (a citizen of Valladolid). The planet, of course, is covered with demonyms, and after scouring the world in conversations on this topic with Mary Norris I began a severely selective, highly subjective A-list, extending Mancunian and Vallisoletano through thirty-five others at this writing, including Wulfrunian (Wolverhampton), Novocastrian (Newcastle), Trifluvian (Trois-Rivières), Leodensian (Leeds), Minneapolitan (Minneapolis), Hartlepudlian (Hartlepool), Liverpudlian (you knew it), Haligonian (Halifax), Varsovian (Warsaw), Providentian (Providence), and Tridentine (Trent).” John McPhee, “Draft No. 4,”
New Yorker
, April 29, 2013.

7.
    Leon Mead,
How Words Grow
(New York : T. Y. Crowell and Co., 1907), 181. Twain’s letter to Mead was in October 1900.

8.
    Ibid., 179.

a

 

1.
    A discussion of this term appears in E. Joseph Harker,
Last Ever Notes and Queries
,
A Guardian Book (London: Fourth Estate Ltd., 1998), 126–27. It references the Steinbeck quote as p. 206 of the Penguin edition of
Grapes of Wrath
.

2.
    Elizabeth Webber and Mike Feinsilber,
Grand Allusions: A Lively Guide to Those Expressions, Terms and References You Ought to Know but Might Not
(Washington, DC: Farragut Pub. Co., 1990), 8–9. Contains examples of the term in use. An annotated version of the original by Jack Lynch of Rutgers University can be seen at http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/modest.html.

3.
    E. Sitwell,
Coll. Poems
(1930) 124: Shone . . . apricots so ripe their kernels seem Gemmed amethysts,—the rose abricotine,

4.
Oxford English Dictionary,
1906  ‘O. Henry’ Four Million (1916) 14. The financial loss of a dollar sixty-five, all so far fulfilled according to Hoyle.

5.
    Alf Pratte, “A Word on Wordsmiths,”
Masthead
, Spring 1999.

6.
    Ellen Goodman, “With Age Comes Wisdom—We Can Only Hope,”
Columbia Daily Tribune
, April 1, 2008.

7.
    William Rose Benét, ed.,
The Reader’s Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia of World Literature and the Arts
(New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1948), 15.

8.
    Lawrence E. Cole,
General Psychology
(New York: McGraw-Hill, 1939), 520, 586.

9.
    Redgate, “The Red Pencil,”
Washington Post,
March 17, 1998, D19.

10.
Oxford English Dictionary,
1836   W. Irving,
N.Y. Mirror 4 Nov. 145/2:   “The almighty dollar, that great object of universal devotion throughout our land.”
11.
Oxford English Dictionary,
G. H. Lewes, “Contemporary Literature of France,”
Westminster Review
58 (Oct. 1852): 614–30.  1842
N.Y. Rev
. Jan. 167.
BOOK: Authorisms: Words Wrought by Writers
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